Title of article
Avascular Necrosis of the Femoral Head: Are Any Genes Involved?
Author/Authors
Pouya ، Farzaneh Department of Medical Genetics - Medical Genetics Research Center, Faculty of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Kerachian ، Mohammad Amin Department of Medical Genetics - Medical Genetics Research Center, Faculty of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
From page
149
To page
155
Abstract
Avascular necrosis of the femoral head (ANFH) is a pathologic process that results from interruption of blood supply to the femur bone resulting in the death of bone cells and collapse of the femoral head. Nontraumatic ANFH continuesto be a significant challenge to orthopedic surgeons. While the exact mechanisms remain elusive, many new insights have emerged from research in the last decade that has given us a clearer picture of the pathogenesis of nontraumatic ANFH. Progression to the end stage of ANFH appears to be related to five main mechanisms: hypercoagulable conditions, angiogenesis suppressions, hyperadipogenesis, heritable states, and switching the bone remodelling into bone resorption. Researchers have been examining the pathogenic mechanisms of ANFH but none of these theories have been firmly confirmed although some appear more plausible than the others. All of these factors can switch bone remodelling into bone resorption, which can further lead to ANFH progression ending up to femoral head collapse.
Keywords
Avascular , Avascular necrosis , Femur , Osteonecrosis
Journal title
The Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery
Journal title
The Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery
Record number
2765093
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