Multiple Myeloma (Part 2) - Update on The Approach to Bone Disease.
Alex GuedesRicardo Gehrke BeckerLuiz Eduardo Moreira TeixeiraPublished in: Revista brasileira de ortopedia (2023)
The increase in life expectancy of the world population has led to a concomitant increase in the prevalence of multiple myeloma (MM), a disease that usually affects the elderly population. Bone lesions are frequent in patients with this condition, demanding an early approach, from drug treatment, through radiotherapy to orthopedic surgery (prophylactic or therapeutic) with the objective of preventing or delaying the occurrence of fracture, or, when this event has already occurred, treat it through stabilization or replacement (lesions located in the appendicular skeleton) and/or promote stabilization and spinal cord decompression (lesions located in the axial skeleton), providing rapid pain relief, return to ambulation and resocialization, returning quality of life to patients. The aim of this review is to update the reader on the findings of pathophysiology, clinical, laboratory and imaging, differential diagnosis and therapeutic approach of multiple myeloma bone disease (MMBD).
Keyphrases
- multiple myeloma
- spinal cord
- bone mineral density
- minimally invasive
- neuropathic pain
- risk assessment
- end stage renal disease
- soft tissue
- early stage
- newly diagnosed
- radiation therapy
- chronic pain
- ejection fraction
- bone loss
- high resolution
- risk factors
- bone regeneration
- emergency department
- coronary artery bypass
- prognostic factors
- body composition
- squamous cell carcinoma
- mass spectrometry
- acute coronary syndrome
- replacement therapy
- rectal cancer