Fibrous dysplasia
Fibrous is a very rare nonhereditary disorder where normal bone and is replaced with fibrous , resulting in formation of bone that is weak and prone to expansion. As a result, most result from fracture, deformity, functional impairment, pain, and the impingement of nerves. Disease occurs along a broad ranging from mostly incidental , to severe disabling disease. Disease can affect one bone (monostotic), multiple (polyostotic), or all bones (panostotic) and may occur in isolation or in combination with café au lait skin macules and hyperfunctioning endocrinopathies, termed McCune–Albright . More rarely, fibrous dysplasia may be associated with intramuscular myxomas, termed Mazabraud's syndrome. Fibrous dysplasia is very rare, and there is no known cure. While fibrous dysplasia is not itself a form of cancer, in severe cases it may undergo a transformation into cancers such as osteosarcoma or chondrosarcoma, so some clinicians may regard it as precancerous rather than .
Underlined words are explained — tap any of them.
Symptoms — what it feels like
- ·Bone pain, bone deformities, local swelling
Causes — why it happens
- · of GNAS locus
Complications
- ·Bone fractures