Osteoid Osteoma: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 20: Line 20:


== Characteristics/Clinical Presentation<br>  ==
== Characteristics/Clinical Presentation<br>  ==
This type of tumor is commonly found in the diaphysis of long bones (proximal femur), hands and feed and posterior elements of the spine (lamina and spinouse processes).
Clinical presentation is typically pain in the area of the tumor, worse at night, increased skin temperature, sweating and tenderness to palpation of the localized area. Pain is relieved by salicylates or aspirin. <br>


== Associated Comorbidities<br>  ==
== Associated Comorbidities<br>  ==

Revision as of 19:54, 1 February 2010

Instructions[edit | edit source]

After reading over these instructions, you can begin creating content related to the topic. You can start by adding general descriptive content about the disorder that could be in narrative and/or bullet format. The editing tools above allow you to edit the page much like a Word document. You can easily add links to other websites using the link icon above (Globe with chain link icon). Here are some of the links you could add: 

  • Medical sites related to the disorder
    *Video/photos related to the disorder
    *Links to abstract of research in Pubmed/Medline

In the initial stage, think of this as notes or resource area on the topic. Therefore, it is best to add as many quality resources as possible. In later stages, students and faculty will edit the content to highlight the most appropriate resources and to get the content in a more professional looking format.

Here are the headings for your disorder:

Definition/Description[edit | edit source]

Benign osteoblastic tumor consisting of vascular osteoid tissue centrally and sclerotic bone peripherally. (Goodman & Snyder)

Prevalence[edit | edit source]

1/8 to 1/10 of symptomatic bone tumors and 5% of all primary bone tumors. (Lenke)

Usually found in males (3:1) in the 5-25 year old range.

Characteristics/Clinical Presentation
[edit | edit source]

This type of tumor is commonly found in the diaphysis of long bones (proximal femur), hands and feed and posterior elements of the spine (lamina and spinouse processes).


Clinical presentation is typically pain in the area of the tumor, worse at night, increased skin temperature, sweating and tenderness to palpation of the localized area. Pain is relieved by salicylates or aspirin.

Associated Comorbidities
[edit | edit source]

Medications[edit | edit source]

Diagnostic Tests/Lab Tests/Lab Values[edit | edit source]

Causes[edit | edit source]

Systemic Involvement[edit | edit source]

Medical Management (current best evidence)[edit | edit source]

Physical Therapy Management (current best evidence)[edit | edit source]

Alternative or Holistic Management (current best evidence)[edit | edit source]

Case Reports[edit | edit source]

Resources
[edit | edit source]