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[The radiology of osteogenesis imperfecta].
La Radiologia Medica 1992 November
The term "osteogenesis imperfecta" refers to a heterogeneous group of hereditary diseases characterized by osteopenia, increased bone fragility, blue sclerae and dentinogenesis imperfecta. The abnormal synthesis of type-I collagen is responsible for the pathologic changes occurring not only in bone, but also in skin, tendons and ligaments, sclerae and teeth. The clinical and radiographic features of 5 cases (2 males and 3 females; age range: 1 month to 29 years) were analyzed. The patients were unrelated with each other. The diagnosis of the different types of osteogenesis imperfecta is as difficult as the identification of the various genotypes which are responsible for the different clinical pictures. The most characteristic radiographic pattern--which is observed in any type of the disease--consists in osteopenia associated, in most cases, with multiple fractures and deformities--e.g., micromelia, large metaphysis, archon long bones. Typically, "pop corn" calcifications are observed in both epiphysis and metaphysis of long bones. Dentinogenesis imperfecta is one of the most significant clinical patterns, and it can be the only bone abnormality. The prognosis of osteogenesis imperfecta is as varied as its genetics--i.e., the fractures discovered at birth are not necessarily a negative prognostic sign.
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