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Gross Anatomy of Bone01:17

Gross Anatomy of Bone

The two main features of a long bone are the diaphysis and the epiphysis.
The diaphysis is the tubular shaft that runs between the proximal and distal ends of the bone. The walls of the diaphysis are composed of dense and hard compact bone made of numerous osteons — the functional unit of the compact bone. The hollow region in the diaphysis is called the medullary cavity, which harbors the bone marrow. In infants and children, this marrow cavity is filled with red marrow, whereas in adults, it...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 26, 2026

Three-Dimensional Bone Extracellular Matrix Model for Osteosarcoma
08:07

Three-Dimensional Bone Extracellular Matrix Model for Osteosarcoma

Published on: April 12, 2019

[Osteochondrosarcoma: clinical and morphological comparisons].

I V Bulycheva, A N Makhson, I V Kuz'min

    Arkhiv Patologii
    |January 14, 2009
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Accurate chondrosarcoma diagnosis relies on clinical evaluation, imaging, and histology. While advanced cytogenetic assays offer precision, they are costly; standard methods remain crucial for classifying these cartilaginous tumors.

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    Area of Science:

    • Orthopedics
    • Oncology
    • Pathology

    Background:

    • Chondrosarcoma classification and diagnosis present challenges in clinical practice.
    • Distinguishing between primary, secondary, and periosteal chondrosarcomas is critical.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To review current challenges in diagnosing common cartilaginous malignancies.
    • To evaluate the utility of various diagnostic techniques for chondrosarcoma.

    Main Methods:

    • Analysis of 109 chondrosarcoma cases operated on between 2005-2007.
    • Literature review on cartilaginous tumor classification and diagnosis.
    • Evaluation of diagnostic modalities including clinical presentation, radiation studies, histology, cytogenetics, and fine-needle biopsy.

    Main Results:

    • Classical primary chondrosarcoma (77 cases) was the most common type, followed by secondary (28 cases) and periosteal (4 cases).
    • Cytogenetic assays improve diagnostic accuracy but are often inaccessible due to cost.
    • Clinical picture, imaging, and standard histology are principal diagnostic criteria, establishing tumor differentiation and extent.

    Conclusions:

    • Standard diagnostic methods (clinical, imaging, histology) remain essential for chondrosarcoma management.
    • Advanced techniques like cytogenetics are valuable but limited by accessibility.
    • Fine-needle biopsy can offer supplementary diagnostic information.