Osteomyelitis: Oral Pathology 4 Stage DR - Hemn M.Sharif (B.D.S, MSC, O.Medicine) 2-4-2020
Osteomyelitis: Oral Pathology 4 Stage DR - Hemn M.Sharif (B.D.S, MSC, O.Medicine) 2-4-2020
Osteomyelitis: Oral Pathology 4 Stage DR - Hemn M.Sharif (B.D.S, MSC, O.Medicine) 2-4-2020
Oral pathology
4th stage
Dr.Hemn M.Sharif
(B.D.S, MSc, O.Medicine)
2-4-2020
Inflammatory diseases of the jaws:
Predisposing factors:
1. Traumatic injuries; penetrating, contaminated open fractures or
gunshot wounds.
2. Radiation, and certain chemical substances.
3. Some bone disease; Paget's disease or osteopetrosis.
4. Impaired immune defence (acute leukaemia, poorly controlled
diabetes mellitus, sickle cell anaemia, chronic alcoholism or
malnutrition).
Clinical features:
• More common in adult with mandibular infection
• Osteomyelitis of Maxilla more common in neonate .
• Sever throbbing pain , deeply sited pain .
• Swelling ,malaise and pyrexia
EARLY :
Gingiva red swollen and tender, involved teeth tender and mobile .
LATE :
Intra and extra-oral pus discharge
FINAL:
• Subperiosteal bone formation cause swelling to become firm
• Regional L.N enlargement
• Paresthesia of lower lips .
• Trismus
● Radiographic:
in the early stages is normal. After 10-14 days bone resorption
produces irregular, moth-eaten radiolucency. Dead bone
appears as dense radio-opaque areas become more sharply
defined as they separated as sequestra.
● Pathology
The mandible is much more frequently involved than the
maxilla ,because the vascular supply is readily compromised.
Thrombosis of the mandibular artery or its branching leads to
extensive necrosis of bone. In contrast, maxilla has rich
collateral circulation.
Histopathology:
❑ The bone marrow undergoes liquefaction, and a purulent
exudate occupies the marrow space. A large number of
neutrophils with the occasional presence of lymphocytes
and plasma cells are seen.
❑ Some areas of affected bone undergo necrosis with
degeneration of both osteoblasts and osteocytes and result
in the development of sequestrum, It is a dead piece of
bone appears with empty lacunae and eroded scalloped
outline which is produced by osteoclastic resorption.
Management:
1. Swab from the depths of the lesion needed for culture and
sensitivity testing, antibiotic for 4-6wks.
2. Debridement and drainage and immobilise of fracture, removal
of loosening tooth and sequestrum.
Complications :
➢Anesthesia of the lower lip usually recovers with the elimination
of the infection.
➢Pathological fracture caused by extensive bone destruction.
➢Cellulitis due to the spread of exceptionally virulent bacteria or
septicemia in an immune deficient patient.
Chronic suppurative osteomyelitis
Persistent low-grade jaw infection, associated with bone
destruction and granulation tissue formation, but little
suppuration.
It results from:
1) inadequately treated acute osteomyelitis.
2) as a complication of irradiation.
3) as a result of infection by weakly virulent bacteria or in
avascular bone.
Clinical features:
▪Long-lasting mild and dull pain in the jaw which has developed
following an acute tooth abscess, tooth fracture or extraction.
▪Sinus tracts may develop intraorally or extra orally with the
discharge of purulent materials.
▪Tooth lose with the development of sequestrum
Radiograph:
Moth-eaten radiolucent area (patchy ill-defined radiolucency) in the
bone with poorly defined margins. Radiopaque foci represent areas of
sequestrum formation.
Histopathology:
Lymphocytes, plasma cells, and macrophages are predominant with
an accumulation of exudates within medullary spaces. Osteoblastic
and osteoclastic activities occur parallel with the formation of
irregular bony trabeculae having reversal lines. Sequestrum also may
be seen.
Chronic non-suppurative osteomyelitis (sclerosing osteomyelitis)
Localised bone reactions to a source of inflammation or infection
with no suppuration or infiltration of marrow spaces by
inflammatory cells and bacteria are not readily cultivable.