[Synovial chondromatosis]

Standard

[Synovial chondromatosis]. / Fuerst, Martin; Zustin, Jozef; Lohmann, Christoph; Rüther, Wolfgang.

In: ORTHOPADE, Vol. 38, No. 6, 6, 2009, p. 511-519.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fuerst, M, Zustin, J, Lohmann, C & Rüther, W 2009, '[Synovial chondromatosis]', ORTHOPADE, vol. 38, no. 6, 6, pp. 511-519. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19458934?dopt=Citation>

APA

Fuerst, M., Zustin, J., Lohmann, C., & Rüther, W. (2009). [Synovial chondromatosis]. ORTHOPADE, 38(6), 511-519. [6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19458934?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Fuerst M, Zustin J, Lohmann C, Rüther W. [Synovial chondromatosis]. ORTHOPADE. 2009;38(6):511-519. 6.

Bibtex

@article{bce70a60867a404fbcd2dae66f199ae8,
title = "[Synovial chondromatosis]",
abstract = "Primary articular synovial chondromatosis is a benign, self-limiting neoplastic process in which hyaline cartilage nodules form in the synovial tissue. The disease most frequently affects the knee in men, followed by the elbow. The basic feature of this disease is a metaplastic maturation of the mesenchymal cells in the synovial membrane of a joint into cartilage. These cells mature into chondroblasts and form small nodules of cartilage in the synovial membrane. These nodules subsequently enlarge and detach to lie within the joint space. They become free within the joint as multiple small cartilaginous loose bodies nourished by the synovial fluid. The chondrocytes in the loose bodies continue to multiply, and the loose bodies grow in diameter. Calcification appears in the central zone of the loose bodies, and in some cases, enchondral ossification takes place. The operative therapy depends on the stage of the disease: synovectomy with removal of chondral fragments if active intrasynovial disease is present, and removal of the multiple chondral bodies alone in cases of late inactive disease with no synovial abnormalities. Malignant transformation is unusual and can be difficult to distinguish from benign disease.",
author = "Martin Fuerst and Jozef Zustin and Christoph Lohmann and Wolfgang R{\"u}ther",
year = "2009",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "38",
pages = "511--519",
journal = "ORTHOPADE",
issn = "0085-4530",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - [Synovial chondromatosis]

AU - Fuerst, Martin

AU - Zustin, Jozef

AU - Lohmann, Christoph

AU - Rüther, Wolfgang

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Primary articular synovial chondromatosis is a benign, self-limiting neoplastic process in which hyaline cartilage nodules form in the synovial tissue. The disease most frequently affects the knee in men, followed by the elbow. The basic feature of this disease is a metaplastic maturation of the mesenchymal cells in the synovial membrane of a joint into cartilage. These cells mature into chondroblasts and form small nodules of cartilage in the synovial membrane. These nodules subsequently enlarge and detach to lie within the joint space. They become free within the joint as multiple small cartilaginous loose bodies nourished by the synovial fluid. The chondrocytes in the loose bodies continue to multiply, and the loose bodies grow in diameter. Calcification appears in the central zone of the loose bodies, and in some cases, enchondral ossification takes place. The operative therapy depends on the stage of the disease: synovectomy with removal of chondral fragments if active intrasynovial disease is present, and removal of the multiple chondral bodies alone in cases of late inactive disease with no synovial abnormalities. Malignant transformation is unusual and can be difficult to distinguish from benign disease.

AB - Primary articular synovial chondromatosis is a benign, self-limiting neoplastic process in which hyaline cartilage nodules form in the synovial tissue. The disease most frequently affects the knee in men, followed by the elbow. The basic feature of this disease is a metaplastic maturation of the mesenchymal cells in the synovial membrane of a joint into cartilage. These cells mature into chondroblasts and form small nodules of cartilage in the synovial membrane. These nodules subsequently enlarge and detach to lie within the joint space. They become free within the joint as multiple small cartilaginous loose bodies nourished by the synovial fluid. The chondrocytes in the loose bodies continue to multiply, and the loose bodies grow in diameter. Calcification appears in the central zone of the loose bodies, and in some cases, enchondral ossification takes place. The operative therapy depends on the stage of the disease: synovectomy with removal of chondral fragments if active intrasynovial disease is present, and removal of the multiple chondral bodies alone in cases of late inactive disease with no synovial abnormalities. Malignant transformation is unusual and can be difficult to distinguish from benign disease.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 38

SP - 511

EP - 519

JO - ORTHOPADE

JF - ORTHOPADE

SN - 0085-4530

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -