Paget's disease of bone

Paget's disease of bone (commonly known as Paget's disease or, historically, osteitis deformans) is a condition involving cellular remodeling and deformity of one or more bones. The affected bones show signs of dysregulated bone remodeling at the microscopic level, specifically excessive bone breakdown and subsequent disorganized new bone formation.[1] These structural changes cause the bone to weaken, which may result in deformity, pain, fracture or arthritis of associated joints.[1]

Paget's disease of bone
Other namesosteitis deformans, Paget's disease
"This 92 year-old male patient presented for assessment of sudden inability to move half his body. An incidental finding was marked thickening of the calvarium. The diploic space is widened and there are ill-defined sclerotic and lucent areas throughout. The cortex is thickened and irregular. The findings probably correspond to the “cotton wool spots” seen on plain films in the later stages of Paget’s disease."
Pronunciation
  • "Paget" /ˈpæɪt/
SpecialtyRheumatology 

The exact cause is unknown, although leading theories indicate both genetic and acquired factors (see causes). Paget's disease may affect any one or multiple bones of the body (most commonly pelvis, tibia, femur, lumbar vertebrae, and skull), but never the entire skeleton,[1][2] and does not spread from bone to bone.[3] Rarely, a bone affected by Paget's disease can transform into a malignant bone cancer.

As the disease often affects people differently, treatments of Paget's disease can vary. Although there is no cure for Paget's disease, medications (bisphosphonates and calcitonin) can help control the disorder and lessen pain and other symptoms. Medications are often successful in controlling the disorder, especially when started before complications begin.

Paget's disease affects from 1.5 to 8.0 percent of the population, and is most common in those of British descent.[4] It is primarily diagnosed in older people and is rare in people less than 55 years of age.[5] Men are more commonly affected than women (3:2).[6] The disease is named after English surgeon Sir James Paget, who described it in 1877.

Signs and symptoms

The Ugly Duchess - portrait by Quentin Matsys. Michael Baum, emeritus professor of surgery at University College London, suggested that the sitter had Paget's disease of bone.[7]

Mild or early cases of Pagets are asymptomatic, and so most people are diagnosed with Paget's disease incidentally during medical evaluation for another problem. Approximately 35% of patients with Paget's have symptoms related to the disease when they are first diagnosed.[5] Overall, the most common symptom is bone pain.[5] When symptoms do occur, they may be confused with those of arthritis or other disorders, and so diagnosis may be delayed.

Paget's may first be noticed as an increasing deformity of a person's bones.

Paget's disease affecting the skull may cause frontal bossing, increased hat size, and headaches. Often patients may develop loss of hearing in one or both ears[5] due to auditory foramen narrowing and resultant compression of the nerves in the inner ear. Rarely, skull involvement may lead to compression of the nerves that supply the eye, leading to vision loss.[5]

Associated conditions

Paget's disease is a frequent component of multisystem proteinopathy. Advanced Paget's disease may lead to other medical conditions, including:

  • Osteoarthritis may result from changes in bone shape that alter normal skeletal mechanics. For example, bowing of a femur affected by Paget's may distort overall leg alignment, subjecting the knee to abnormal mechanical forces and accelerating degenerative wear.
  • Heart failure is a rare, reported consequence of severe Paget's disease (i.e. more than 40% skeletal involvement). The abnormal bone formation is associated with recruitment of abnormal blood vessels, forcing the cardiovascular system to work harder (pump more blood) to ensure adequate circulation.[8]
  • Kidney stones are somewhat more common in patients with Paget's disease.
  • Nervous system problems may occur in Paget's disease, resulting from increased pressure on the brain, spinal cord, or nerves, and reduced blood flow to the brain and spinal cord.
  • When Paget's disease affects the facial bones, the teeth may become loose. Disturbance in chewing may occur. Chronic dental problems may lead to infection of the jaw bone.
  • Angioid streaks may develop, possibly as a result of calcification of collagen or other pathological deposition.
  • Vulvar Paget's disease ulceration can occur in female reproductive organs.[9]

Paget's disease is not associated with osteoporosis. Although Paget's disease and osteoporosis can occur in the same patient, they are different disorders. Despite their marked differences, several treatments for Paget's disease are also used to treat osteoporosis.

Causes

Viral

Paget's disease may be caused by a slow virus infection (i.e., paramyxoviridae) present for many years before symptoms appear. Associated viral infections include respiratory syncytial virus,[10] canine distemper virus,[11][12] and the measles virus.[13][14] However, recent evidence has cast some doubt upon the measles association.[15] Laboratory contamination may have played a role in past studies linking paramyxovirus (e.g. measles) to Paget's disease.[16]

Genetic

There is a hereditary factor in the development of Paget's disease of bone.[17][18] Two genes, SQSTM1 and RANK, and specific regions of chromosome 5 and 6 are associated with Paget's disease of bone. Genetic causes may or may not involve a family history of Paget's disease.

About 40–50% of people with the inherited version of Paget's disease have a mutation in the gene SQSTM1, which encodes a protein, called p62, that is involved in regulating the function of osteoclasts (bone cells).[5] However, about 10-15 percent of people that develop the disease without any family history also have a mutation in the SQSTM1 gene.[5]

Paget's disease of bone is associated with mutations in RANK. Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor κ B (RANK), which is a type I membrane protein that is expressed on the surface of osteoclasts and is involved in their activation upon ligand binding.[19] Additional genetic associations include:

Name OMIM Locus Gene
PDB1 167250 6p ?
PDB2 18q22.1 RANK
PDB3 5q35 SQSTM1
PDB4 606263 5q31[20] ?

Pathogenesis

Micrograph showing Paget's disease of the bone with the characteristic jigsaw puzzle-like/mosaic pattern, H&E stain

The pathogenesis of Paget's disease is described in four stages:[21]

  1. Osteoclastic activity
  2. Mixed osteoclastic – osteoblastic activity
  3. Osteoblastic activity
  4. Malignant degeneration

Initially, there is a marked increase in the rate of bone resorption in localized areas, caused by large and numerous osteoclasts. These localized areas of pathological destruction of bone tissue (osteolysis) are seen radiologically as an advancing lytic wedge in long bones or the skull. When this occurs in the skull, it is called osteoporosis circumscripta. The osteolysis is followed by a compensatory increase in bone formation induced by the bone forming cells, called osteoblasts, that are recruited to the area. This is associated with accelerated deposition of lamellar bone in a disorganized fashion. This intense cellular activity produces a chaotic picture of trabecular bone ("mosaic" pattern), rather than the normal linear lamellar pattern. The resorbed bone is replaced and the marrow spaces are filled by an excess of fibrous connective tissue with a marked increase in blood vessels, causing the bone to become hypervascular. The bone hypercellularity may then diminish, leaving a dense "pagetic bone," also known as burned-out Paget's disease. A later phase of the disease is characterized by the replacement of normal bone marrow with highly vascular fibrous tissue.[22]

Sir James Paget first suggested the disease was due to an inflammatory process. Some evidence suggests that a paramyxovirus infection is the underlying cause of Paget's disease,[5] which may support the possible role of inflammation in the pathogenesis. However, no infectious virus has yet been isolated as a causative agent, and other evidence suggests an intrinsic hyperresponsive reaction to vitamin D and RANK ligand is the cause. Further research is therefore necessary.[23]

Diagnosis

An ivory vertebra due to probable Paget disease

The first clinical manifestation of Paget's disease is usually an elevated alkaline phosphatase in the blood.[5]

Paget's disease of right innominate bone. Man of 80 years age.

Paget's disease may be diagnosed using one or more of the following tests:

  • Pagetic bone has a characteristic appearance on X-rays. A skeletal survey is therefore indicated.
  • An elevated level of alkaline phosphatase in the blood in combination with normal calcium, phosphate, and aminotransferase levels in an elderly patient are suggestive of Paget's disease.
  • Markers of bone turnover in urine eg. Pyridinoline
  • Elevated levels of serum and urinary hydroxyproline are also found.
  • Bone scans are useful in determining the extent and activity of the condition. If a bone scan suggests Paget's disease, the affected bone(s) should be X-rayed to confirm the diagnosis.

Differential diagnosis

Comparison of bone pathology
Condition Calcium Phosphate Alkaline phosphatase Parathyroid hormone Comments
Osteopenia unaffected unaffected normal unaffected decreased bone mass
Osteopetrosis unaffected unaffected elevated unaffected thick dense bones also known as marble bone
Osteomalacia and rickets decreased decreased elevated elevated soft bones
Osteitis fibrosa cystica elevated decreased elevated elevated brown tumors
Paget's disease of bone unaffected unaffected variable (depending on stage of disease) unaffected abnormal bone architecture

Treatment

Although initially diagnosed by a primary care physician, endocrinologists (internal medicine physicians who specialize in hormonal and metabolic disorders), rheumatologists (internal medicine physicians who specialize in joint and muscle disorders), orthopedic surgeons, neurosurgeons, neurologists, oral and maxillofacial surgeons, and otolaryngologists are generally knowledgeable about treating Paget's disease, and may be called upon to evaluate specialized symptoms. It can sometimes difficult to predict whether a person with Paget's disease, who otherwise has no signs or symptoms of the disorder, will develop symptoms or complications (such as a bone fracture) in the future.

Medication

The goal of treatment is to relieve bone pain and prevent the progression of the disease. These medications are usually recommended for people with Paget's disease who:

  • have bone pain, headache, back pain, or a nerve-related symptom (such as "shooting" pains in the leg) that is directly associated with the disease;
  • have elevated levels of serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) in their blood;
  • display evidence that a bone fracture will occur;
  • require pretreatment therapy for affected bones that require surgery;
  • have active symptoms in the skull, long bones, or vertebrae (spine);
  • have the disease in bones located next to major joints, placing them at risk of developing osteoarthritis;
  • develop hypercalcemia that occurs when a person with several bones affected by Paget's disease and a high serum alkaline phosphatase level is immobilized.

Bisphosphonates

Five bisphosphonates are currently available. In general, the most commonly prescribed are risedronic acid, alendronic acid, and pamidronic acid. Etidronic acid and other bisphosphonates may be appropriate therapies for selected patients but are less commonly used. In one study it was reported that people experienced side effects when taking bisphosphonates for six months, however the quality of evidence was low.[24] None of these drugs should be used by people with severe kidney disease.

  • Etidronate disodium The approved regimen is once daily for six months; a higher dose is more commonly used. No food, beverage, or medications should be consumed for two hours before and after taking. The course should not exceed six months, but repeat courses can be given after rest periods, preferably of three to six months duration.
  • Pamidronate disodium in intravenous form: the approved regimen uses an infusion over four hours on each of three consecutive days, but a more commonly used regimen is over two to four hours for two or more consecutive or nonconsecutive days.
  • Alendronate sodium is given as tablets once daily for six months; patients should wait at least 30 minutes after taking before eating any food, drinking anything other than tap water, taking any medication, or lying down (patient may sit).
  • Tiludronate disodium are taken once daily for three months; they may be taken any time of day, as long as there is a period of two hours before and after resuming food, beverages, and medications.
  • Risedronate sodium tablet taken once daily for 2 months is the prescribed regimen; patients should wait at least 30 minutes after taking before eating any food, drinking anything other than tap water, taking any medication, or lying down (patient may sit).
  • Zoledronic acid is given as an intravenous infusion; a single dose is effective for two years. This is recommended for most people at high risk with active disease.[25]

Calcitonin

Salcatonin, also called calcitonin-salmon, is a synthetic copy of a polypeptide hormone secreted by the ultimobranchial gland of salmon. Miacalcin is administered by injection, three times per week or daily, for 6–18 months. Repeat courses can be given after brief rest periods. Miacalcin may be appropriate for certain patients, but is seldom used. Calcitonin is also linked to increased chance of cancer.[26] Due to the increased risk of cancer, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) recommended that calcitonin be used only on a short-term basis for 3 conditions for which it had previously been approved in the European Union: Paget's disease, acute bone loss resulting from sudden immobilization, and hypercalcemia caused by cancer.

The EMA said it based its recommendations on a review of the benefits and risks of calcitonin-containing medicines. Conducted by the agency's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP), the review encompassed available data from the companies that market these drugs, postmarketing safety data, randomized controlled studies, 2 studies of unlicensed oral calcitonin drugs, and experimental cancer studies, among other sources.

As a solution for injection or infusion, calcitonin should be administered for no more than 4 weeks to prevent acute bone loss resulting from sudden immobilization, and normally for no more than 3 months to treat Paget's disease, the EMA said. The agency did not specify a time frame for the short-term use of calcitonin for treating hypercalcemia caused by cancer.

Surgery

Medical therapy prior to surgery helps to decrease bleeding and other complications. Patients who are having surgery should discuss treatment with their physician. There are generally three major complications of Paget's disease for which surgery may be recommended.

  • Fractures — Surgery may allow fractures to heal in a better position.
  • Severe degenerative arthritis — If disability is severe and medication and physical therapy are no longer helpful, joint replacement of the hips and knees may be considered.
  • Bone deformity — Cutting and realignment of pagetic bone (osteotomy) may help painful weight bearing joints, especially the knees.

Complications resulting from enlargement of the skull or spine may injure the nervous system. However, most neurologic symptoms, even those that are moderately severe, can be treated with medication and do not require neurosurgery.

Diet and exercise

In general, patients with Paget's disease should receive 1000–1500 mg of calcium, adequate sunshine, and at least 400 units of vitamin D daily. This is especially important in patients being treated with bisphosphonates; however, taking oral bisphosphonates should be separated from taking calcium by at least two hours, because the calcium can inhibit the absorption of the bisphosphonate. Patients with a history of kidney stones should discuss calcium and vitamin D intake with their physicians.

Exercise is very important in maintaining skeletal health, avoiding weight gain, and maintaining joint mobility. Since undue stress on affected bones should be avoided, people with Paget's disease of bone should discuss any exercise program with their physicians or physical therapists before beginning.

Prognosis

The disease is progressive and slowly worsens with time, although people may remain minimally symptomatic. Treatment is aimed at controlling symptoms, but there is no cure. Any bone or bones can be affected, but Paget's disease occurs most frequently in the spine, skull, pelvis, femur, and lower legs.

Osteogenic sarcoma, a form of bone cancer, is a rare complication of Paget's disease occurring in less than one percent of those affected. The development of osteosarcoma may be suggested by the sudden onset or worsening pain.

Epidemiology

Pagets disease of bone is the second most common metabolic bone disorder, after osteoporosis.[27] The overall prevalence and severity of Paget's disease are decreasing; the cause for these changes is unclear.[28] Paget's disease is rare in people less than 55 years of age,[5] and the prevalence increases with age.[28] Evidence from studies of autopsy results have demonstrated Paget's disease in about 3 percent of people older than 40 years of age.[28] Paget's disease is more common in males than females.[6] Rates of Paget's disease are about 50 percent higher in men than in women.

About 15 percent of people with Paget's disease also have a family member with the disease.[5] In cases where the disease is familial, it is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, although not all people that inherit the affected version of the genes will express the disease (incomplete penetrance).[5]

The incidence of Paget's disease varies considerably with geographic location.[28] Paget's predominantly affects people of European descent, whereas people of African, Asian, or Indian descent are less commonly affected.[5] Paget's disease is less common in Switzerland and Scandinavia than in the rest of Western Europe.[28] Paget's disease is uncommon in the native populations of North and South America, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. When an individual from these regions does develop Paget's disease, there is typically some European ancestry present.

History

The condition was initially described by Dr. James Paget. In a paper published in 1877, Paget told of five patients with "a rare disease of bones" which presented with slowly progressive bone deformities in the 4th and 5th decades of age.[29] Strikingly, the first patient was described to have many of the classic complications of the disease, including arthritis related to abnormal bone mechanics, cranial nerve palsies associated with an enlarging skull, and malignant transformation of a tumor of the radius which ultimately proved fatal. Paget's post-mortem autopsy evaluation showed "bones of the vault of this skull were in every part increased to about four times the normal thickness," and microscopic evaluation showed evidence of both bone erosion and abnormal remodeling. Although he incorrectly attributed the findings to a process of chronic inflammation, having ruled out tumor and hypertrophy as alternative etiologies, these prescient observations of a mixed destructive/regenerative process correspond to the modern understanding of the disease.

Holding, then, the disease to be an inflammation of bones, I would suggest that, for brief reference, and for the present, it may be called, after its most striking character, Osteitis deformans. A better name may be given when more is known of it.

James Paget, Paget J. On a form of chronic inflammation of bone (osteitis deformans). Medico-cirurgical Transactions of London 1887;60:37-63.

Paget's disease of bone was originally termed osteitis deformans, because it was thought to involve an inflammatory process, which is implied by the suffix -itis. Now, that term is considered technically incorrect, and the preferred term is osteodystrophia deformans.[30]

Society and culture

  • Ludwig Van Beethoven is speculated to have had Paget's disease based on autopsy description, and which may have contributed to his well-known deafness.[31]
  • C.S.I.: NY: A murder victim in Season 2 episode "Youngblood" was afflicted with Paget's disease.
  • Retired Boston Red Sox center fielder Dom DiMaggio suffered from Paget's disease and served as a member of the board of directors of the Paget Foundation.[32]
  • Egill Skallagrímsson, the main character in Egils Saga, may have suffered from this disease.
  • The X-Files: Fox Mulder's mother commits suicide in Season 7, Episode 10 "Sein und Zeit," after being diagnosed with Paget's disease.

References

  1. Paul Tuck, Stephen; Layfield, Robert; Walker, Julie; Mekkayil, Babitha; Francis, Roger (2017-12-01). "Adult Paget's disease of bone: a review". Rheumatology. 56 (12): 2050–2059. doi:10.1093/rheumatology/kew430. ISSN 1462-0324. PMID 28339664.
  2. Ralston, Stuart H.; Layfield, Rob (2012-08-01). "Pathogenesis of Paget Disease of Bone". Calcified Tissue International. 91 (2): 97–113. doi:10.1007/s00223-012-9599-0. ISSN 0171-967X. PMID 22543925.
  3. Ethel, SS; Roodman, GD (2008). "Paget's disease of bone". In Rosen (ed.). Primer on the metabolic bone diseases and disorders of mineral metabolism (7th ed.). Washington, DC: American Society for Bone and Mineral Research. pp. 335–42. ISBN 978-0977888214.
  4. Valenzuela, Elena Nebot; Pietschmann, Peter (2017-02-01). "Epidemiology and pathology of Paget's disease of bone – a review". Wiener Medizinische Wochenschrift. 167 (1–2): 2–8. doi:10.1007/s10354-016-0496-4. ISSN 0043-5341. PMC 5266784. PMID 27600564.
  5. Ralston, Stuart H. (Feb 14, 2013). "Paget's Disease of Bone". New England Journal of Medicine. 368 (7): 644–650. doi:10.1056/NEJMcp1204713. PMID 23406029.
  6. Kumar and Clark, Parveen and Micheal (2009). Welcome to Kumar and Clark's Clinical Medicine 7E. Elsiver. p. 565. ISBN 978-0-7020-2993-6.
  7. Brown, Mark (2008-10-11). "Solved: mystery of The Ugly Duchess - and the Da Vinci connection". The Guardian. Retrieved 2012-04-30.
  8. Chakravorty, N. K. (1978). "Some unusual features of Paget's disease of bone". Gerontology. 24 (6): 459–472. doi:10.1159/000212286. ISSN 0304-324X. PMID 689380.
  9. Vanni, Roberta; Porodo, Giuseppia (2007). "Vulva and Vagina tumors: an overview". atlasgeneticsoncology.org. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
  10. Mills BG, Singer FR, Weiner LP, Holst PA (February 1981). "Immunohistological demonstration of respiratory syncytial virus antigens in Paget disease of bone". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 78 (2): 1209–13. doi:10.1073/pnas.78.2.1209. PMC 319977. PMID 6940136.
  11. Hoyland JA, Dixon JA, Berry JL, Davies M, Selby PL, Mee AP (May 2003). "A comparison of in situ hybridisation, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and in situ-RT-PCR for the detection of canine distemper virus RNA in Paget disease". J. Virol. Methods. 109 (2): 253–9. doi:10.1016/S0166-0934(03)00079-X. PMID 12711070.
  12. Gordon MT, Anderson DC, Sharpe PT (1991). "Canine distemper virus localised in bone cells of patients with Paget disease". Bone. 12 (3): 195–201. doi:10.1016/8756-3282(91)90042-H. PMID 1910961.
  13. Friedrichs WE, Reddy SV, Bruder JM, et al. (January 2002). "Sequence analysis of measles virus nucleocapsid transcripts in patients with Paget's disease". J. Bone Miner. Res. 17 (1): 145–51. doi:10.1359/jbmr.2002.17.1.145. PMID 11771661.
  14. Baslé MF, Fournier JG, Rozenblatt S, Rebel A, Bouteille M (May 1986). "Measles virus RNA detected in Paget disease bone tissue by in situ hybridization". J. Gen. Virol. 67 (5): 907–13. doi:10.1099/0022-1317-67-5-907. PMID 3701300.
  15. Matthews BG, Afzal MA, Minor PD, et al. (April 2008). "Failure to detect measles virus ribonucleic acid in bone cells from patients with Paget's disease". J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 93 (4): 1398–401. doi:10.1210/jc.2007-1978. PMID 18230662.
  16. Ralston SH, Afzal MA, Helfrich MH, et al. (April 2007). "Multicenter blinded analysis of RT-PCR detection methods for paramyxoviruses in relation to Paget disease of bone". J. Bone Miner. Res. 22 (4): 569–77. doi:10.1359/jbmr.070103. PMID 17227218.
  17. Ralston SH, Langston AL, Reid IR (July 2008). "Pathogenesis and management of Paget disease of bone". Lancet. 372 (9633): 155–63. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(08)61035-1. PMID 18620951.
  18. Whyte MP (2006). "Paget's disease of bone and genetic disorders of RANKL/OPG/RANK/NF-kappaB signaling". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1068: 143–64. doi:10.1196/annals.1346.016. PMID 16831914.
  19. Haslam SI, Van Hul W, Morales-Piga A, Balemans W, San-Millan JL, Nakatsuka K, Willems P, Haites NE, Ralston SH (1998). "Paget's disease of bone: evidence for a susceptibility locus on chromosome 18q and for genetic heterogeneity". Journal of Bone and Mineral Research. 13 (6): 911–7. doi:10.1359/jbmr.1998.13.6.911. PMID 9626621.
  20. Laurin N, Brown JP, Lemainque A, et al. (September 2001). "Paget Disease of Bone: Mapping of Two Loci at 5q35-qter and 5q31". Am. J. Hum. Genet. 69 (3): 528–43. doi:10.1086/322975. PMC 1235483. PMID 11473345.
  21. Numan MS, Amiable N, Brown JP, Michou L (2015). "Paget's disease of bone: an osteoimmunological disorder?". Drug Design, Development and Therapy. 9: 4695–707. doi:10.2147/DDDT.S88845. PMC 4544727. PMID 26316708.
  22. Tamparo, Carol; Lewis, Marcia (2011). Diseases of the Human Body. Philadelphia, PA: F.A. Davis Company. p. 221. ISBN 9780803625051.
  23. Basic Pathology, Kumar Abbas Fausto Mitchell, Saunders Elsevier
  24. Corral-Gudino, Luis; Tan, Adrian JH; del Pino-Montes, Javier; Ralston, Stuart H (2017-12-01). "Bisphosphonates for Paget's disease of bone in adults". Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 12: CD004956. doi:10.1002/14651858.cd004956.pub3. ISSN 1465-1858. PMC 6486234. PMID 29192423.
  25. Singer FR, Bone HG, Hosking DJ, Lyles KW, Murad MH, Reid IR, Siris ES (2014). "Paget's disease of bone: an endocrine society clinical practice guideline". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 99 (12): 4408–22. doi:10.1210/jc.2014-2910. PMID 25406796.
  26. Lowes, Robert (20 July 2012). "Calcitonin Linked to Cancer Risk, EMA Warns". Medscape. Retrieved 3 June 2018. A higher proportion of patients treated with calcitonin for long periods of time develop cancer of various types, compared with patients taking placebo. The increase in cancer rates ranged from 0.7% for oral formulations to 2.4% for the nasal formulation.
  27. Alonso, N.; Calero-Paniagua, I.; Pino-Montes, J. del (2017-03-01). "Clinical and Genetic Advances in Paget's Disease of Bone: a Review". Clinical Reviews in Bone and Mineral Metabolism. 15 (1): 37–48. doi:10.1007/s12018-016-9226-0. ISSN 1534-8644. PMC 5309316. PMID 28255281.
  28. Longo DL, Fauci AS, Kasper DL, Hauser SL, Jameson JL, Loscalzo J (2011-07-21). Harrison's principles of internal medicine:Chapter 355. Paget's Disease and Other Dysplasias of Bone (18th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0071748896.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  29. Paget, James (1887). "On a form of chronic inflammation of bone (osteitis deformans)". Medico-cirurgical Transactions of London. 60: 37–63.
  30. Rhodes B, Jawad AS (2005). "Paget's disease of bone: osteitis deformans or osteodystrophia deformans?". Rheumatology. 44 (2): 261–2, author reply 262. doi:10.1093/rheumatology/keh448. PMID 15637095.
  31. Oiseth, Stanley J (2015-10-27). "Beethoven's autopsy revisited: A pathologist sounds a final note". Journal of Medical Biography. 25 (3): 139–147. doi:10.1177/0967772015575883. PMID 26508624.
  32. "Paid Notice: Deaths DIMAGGIO, DOMINIC P". The New York Times. May 10, 2009.

Further reading

  • Singer, FR; Bone HG, 3rd; Hosking, DJ; Lyles, KW; Hassan Murad, M; Reid, IR; Siris, ES (19 November 2014). "Paget's Disease of Bone: An Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. 99 (12): 4408–4422. doi:10.1210/jc.2014-2910. PMID 25406796.
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