exostosis - meaning and definition. What is exostosis
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What (who) is exostosis - definition

HYPEROSTOSIS THAT INVOLVES FORMATION OF NEW BONE ON THE SURFACE OF PREEXISTING BONE
Exostoses; Bone spurs; Bone spur; Exostotic; Elbow spur; Elbow spurs; Bonespurs

exostosis         
[??ks?s't??s?s]
¦ noun (plural exostoses -si:z) Medicine a benign outgrowth of cartilaginous tissue on a bone.
Origin
C16: from Gk, from ex- 'out' + osteon 'bone'.
Exostosis         
·noun A knot formed upon or in the wood of trees by disease.
II. Exostosis ·noun Any protuberance of a bone which is not natural; an excrescence or morbid enlargement of a bone.
Exostosis         
An exostosis, also known as bone spur, is the formation of new bone on the surface of a bone. Exostoses can cause chronic pain ranging from mild to debilitatingly severe, depending on the shape, size, and location of the lesion.

Wikipedia

Exostosis

An exostosis, also known as a bone spur, is the formation of new bone on the surface of a bone. Exostoses can cause chronic pain ranging from mild to debilitatingly severe, depending on the shape, size, and location of the lesion. It is most commonly found in places like the ribs, where small bone growths form, but sometimes larger growths can grow on places like the ankles, knees, shoulders, elbows and hips. Very rarely are they on the skull.

Exostoses are sometimes shaped like spurs, such as calcaneal spurs.

Osteomyelitis, a bone infection, may leave the adjacent bone with exostosis formation. Charcot foot, the neuropathic breakdown of the feet seen primarily in diabetics, can also leave bone spurs that may then become symptomatic.

They normally form on the bones of joints, and can grow upwards. For example, if an extra bone formed on the ankle, it might grow up to the shin.

When used in the phrases "cartilaginous exostosis" or "osteocartilaginous exostosis", the term is considered synonymous with osteochondroma. Some sources consider the two terms to mean the same thing even without qualifiers, but this interpretation is not universal.