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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 45-B, Issue 1 | Pages 76 - 87
1 Feb 1963
Hardy AG Dickson JW

1. Ectopic ossification is commonest in, but not confined to, traumatic paraplegia. It occurs also in many other neurological disorders which have in common a gross disturbance of spinal cord reflex activity. It is a true ossification and must be distinguished from calcification.

2. The neurological lesion may lie anywhere from the cerebral cortex to the mixed peripheral nerve. It may involve motor tracts, sensory tracts or a mixture of both.

3. The ossification is localised and self-limiting. It occurs mainly in the lower limbs and is restricted to certain muscles or muscle groups, the nerve supply of which is always below the level of the central neurological lesion.

4. The blood chemistry is usually normal.

5. A true arthropathy is rare except as part of a secondary suppurative arthritis.

6. The resemblance to myositis ossificans progressiva or to ossifying haematoma is only superficial, although the pathological process at cellular level may be the same.

7. The period of onset after paraplegia is variable. The earliest recorded example is in one of our own cases in which ossification occurred nineteen days after injury. Other patients have developed ossification after several years.

8. The condition is commonest in acquired nervous disease rather than in congenital disorders, and so far as we know it has not been described in the myopathies. The presence of muscular spasticity or flaccidity is relevant only in that it indicates a disturbance of reflex activity.

9. Soft-tissue ulceration appears to be frequently associated with ectopic ossification. The type of new bone formation associated with large chronic ulcers is not to be compared with the new bone formation in the muscles of a paraplegic patient in otherwise good general condition.

10. The occurrence of urinary tract infections with calculi and generalised sepsis is not specifically related to the onset of new bone formation.

11. Localised soft-tissue oedema often precedes the formation of new bone. Its appearance is undoubtedly important, but the mechanism of its origin is obscure.

12. It is not yet known what initiates ectopic ossification, what limits its spread and what finally causes it to stop.

13. We have described 100 examples of ectopic ossification in 603 paraplegic patients.

14. Surgery has been required in only eight patients. The only indication for surgery is bony ankylosis of the hip in an unacceptable position.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 36-B, Issue 3 | Pages 368 - 374
1 Aug 1954
Hardy AG