Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Section I Musculoskeletal radiology
- Achilles tendonopathy/rupture
- Aneurysmal bone cysts
- Ankylosing spondylitis
- Avascular necrosis – osteonecrosis
- Femoral-head osteonecrosis
- Kienböck's disease
- Back pain – including spondylolisthesis/spondylolysis
- Bone cysts
- Bone infarcts (medullary)
- Charcot joint (neuropathic joint)
- Complex regional-pain syndrome
- Crystal deposition disorders
- Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH)
- Discitis and vertebral osteomyelitis
- Disc prolapse – PID – ‘slipped discs’ and sciatica
- Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH)
- Dysplasia – developmental disorders
- Enthesopathy
- Gout
- Haemophilia
- Hyperparathyroidism
- Hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy
- Irritable hip/transient synovitis
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
- Langerhans-cell histiocytosis
- Lymphoma of bone
- Metastases to bone
- Multiple myeloma
- Myositis ossificans
- Non-accidental injury
- Osteoarthrosis – osteoarthritis
- Osteochondroses
- Osteomyelitis (acute)
- Osteoporosis
- Paget's disease
- Perthes disease
- Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS)
- Psoriatic arthropathy
- Renal osteodystrophy (including osteomalacia)
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Rickets
- Rotator-cuff disease
- Scoliosis
- Scheuermann's disease
- Septic arthritis – native and prosthetic joints
- Sickle-cell anaemia
- Slipped upper femoral epiphysis (SUFE)
- Tendinopathy – tendonitis
- Tuberculosis
- Tumours of bone (benign and malignant)
- Section II Trauma radiology
Enthesopathy
from Section I - Musculoskeletal radiology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Section I Musculoskeletal radiology
- Achilles tendonopathy/rupture
- Aneurysmal bone cysts
- Ankylosing spondylitis
- Avascular necrosis – osteonecrosis
- Femoral-head osteonecrosis
- Kienböck's disease
- Back pain – including spondylolisthesis/spondylolysis
- Bone cysts
- Bone infarcts (medullary)
- Charcot joint (neuropathic joint)
- Complex regional-pain syndrome
- Crystal deposition disorders
- Developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH)
- Discitis and vertebral osteomyelitis
- Disc prolapse – PID – ‘slipped discs’ and sciatica
- Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH)
- Dysplasia – developmental disorders
- Enthesopathy
- Gout
- Haemophilia
- Hyperparathyroidism
- Hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy
- Irritable hip/transient synovitis
- Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
- Langerhans-cell histiocytosis
- Lymphoma of bone
- Metastases to bone
- Multiple myeloma
- Myositis ossificans
- Non-accidental injury
- Osteoarthrosis – osteoarthritis
- Osteochondroses
- Osteomyelitis (acute)
- Osteoporosis
- Paget's disease
- Perthes disease
- Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS)
- Psoriatic arthropathy
- Renal osteodystrophy (including osteomalacia)
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Rickets
- Rotator-cuff disease
- Scoliosis
- Scheuermann's disease
- Septic arthritis – native and prosthetic joints
- Sickle-cell anaemia
- Slipped upper femoral epiphysis (SUFE)
- Tendinopathy – tendonitis
- Tuberculosis
- Tumours of bone (benign and malignant)
- Section II Trauma radiology
Summary
Characteristics
Refers to pathology at the tendon–bone interface, where the Sharpey fibres interdigitate.
May be divided into overuse syndromes and inflammatory causes.
Often part of a generalized inflammatory condition, e.g. rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis.
Often due to widespread calcification of tendon origins and insertions into bone. Particularly important in the spine where thickening of the ligamenta flava can cause cauda equina syndrome.
Severely affected tendons may ossify.
Associated with inherited hypophosphataemia (vitamin-D-resistant rickets), adult hypophosphataemic osteomalacia, fibrous dysplasia and Fanconi's syndrome (aminoaciduria).
Clinical features
Can be painful; may be an incidental diagnosis.
Radiological features
Widespread calcification of tendon origins and insertions into bone.
Erosions and bone proliferation (enthesophyte) may be seen.
Management
Treat any underlying metabolic condition, then symptomatic relief.
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- Information
- A-Z of Musculoskeletal and Trauma Radiology , pp. 60 - 61Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008