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Primary Hypertrophic Osteoarthropathy: A Case Report

Authors :
Shima Asadi-Komeleh
Abdolrahman Rostamian
Fatemeh Shahbazi
Shafieh Movassagi
Parviz Soofivand
Source :
Case Reports in Clinical Practice, Vol 3, Iss 1 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, 2018.

Abstract

The primary hypertrophic osteoarthropathy (PHOA or pachydermoperiostosis) is a rare (5% of total HOA) hereditary disease. One study described that the prevalence of PHOA is 0.16%. PHOA characterized by skin thickening (pachydermia), finger clubbing, and proliferation of periosteum (periostitis) with subperiosteal new bone formation and enlarged extremities secondary to periarticular and bone proliferation. Clinical manifestations are variable; the term complete syndrome is used for the patient with pachydermia, coarsening of the face skin and scalp, periostitis, and cutis verticis gyrata; the incomplete form is used when there is no sparing of the scalp; and the frusted form is used for pachydermia with minimal or absent periostitis. We describe a 29-year-old white man with PHOA, and clinical and radiological characteristics of this syndrome, as well as therapeutic approach of PHOA.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25382683 and 25382691
Volume :
3
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Case Reports in Clinical Practice
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6849b3bc70244b7db56b9a51bb4c0886
Document Type :
article