Osteogenetic metaplasticus (OM) Osteogenic metaplasticus is a rare but important phenomenon in medicine, which consists in the emergence of new bone tissue in the bone marrow as a result of the body's response to pathological processes. In this article we will look at the basic concepts and causes of osteogenic metaplasticus, its clinical manifestations and treatment options in modern medicine.
General description Often the definition of osteogenic metaplasty is not considered strict and is not described in medical publications. On the one hand, this is due to insufficient understanding of what should be meant by this term. On the other hand, this process was discovered only at the beginning of the 20th century and currently there are a number of points of view among scientists about its possible causes.
Simply put, osteogenic metastaticus is a new process that occurs in bone marrow tissue and leads to an increase in bone mass. Although different forms of osteogenic metastaticus can develop in different diseases, these studies have shown that the most common cause of the neoplasm is blood cancer or bone marrow cancer. It can appear either simultaneously with a blood disease, or it itself causes bone cancer.
It has also been found that the cause of OM is often related to bone graft transplantation or certain radiation treatments. Some studies have associated the occurrence of OM in patients suffering from Graves' disease. But the most studied type of metastatic disease is primary OM. Most cases of OM occur after a certain stage of the disease, such as sickle cell disease and kidney failure in children, sickle eclipse, myelodysplasia, bone and lymph node cancer.
An excellent example of OM is the vascular formation associated with inflammatory diseases such as tuberculosis, syphilis, bone diseases and polio. It is noteworthy that almost all new bones that appear in these diseases of bone pathology are