EPISODE · Feb 12, 2026 · 44 MIN
Patho 26: Bones, Joints, and Soft Tissue Tumors
from Clinical Deep Dives · host Dr Manaan Kar Ray
This episode explores pathology of bones, joints, and soft tissues as disease of structure under force. These tissues are designed to withstand mechanical stress, transmit movement, and remodel in response to use. Disease emerges when adaptation fails, when remodelling becomes disordered, or when growth escapes regulation.The episode begins with normal skeletal organisation. Bone is presented as a living tissue, continuously remodelled through the balanced activity of osteoblasts and osteoclasts. Cortical and trabecular bone are contrasted in structure and function, explaining why disease patterns differ between weight bearing and non weight bearing regions.Metabolic bone diseases are examined first. Osteoporosis is explored as loss of bone mass and microarchitectural integrity rather than simple thinning, leading to fragility fractures. Osteomalacia and rickets are examined as failures of mineralisation, producing soft, deformable bone under load. The episode highlights how endocrine and nutritional factors shape skeletal strength over time.Inflammatory and degenerative joint diseases are then examined. Osteoarthritis is framed as failure of cartilage repair under repeated stress rather than inevitable ageing. Rheumatoid arthritis is presented as immune mediated synovial disease that progressively destroys cartilage and bone. The episode emphasises how joint pathology reflects both mechanical demand and inflammatory environment.Bone infections are explored as destructive processes shaped by vascular supply and host response. Acute osteomyelitis is contrasted with chronic infection, illustrating how sequestration and fibrosis entrench disease. The episode highlights the difficulty of eradication once bone architecture is disrupted.The episode then turns to neoplasia. Primary bone tumours are introduced as rare but aggressive diseases where histological pattern predicts behaviour. Soft tissue tumours are explored as diverse neoplasms arising from mesenchymal tissues, with behaviour determined by differentiation and growth pattern rather than size alone. Metastatic disease to bone is highlighted as the most common skeletal malignancy, reshaping bone through lysis or sclerosis.Finally, the episode reframes musculoskeletal pathology as disease of adaptation. Bones and joints tolerate stress only while remodelling keeps pace. When imbalance develops, failure follows predictably.Key takeaways* Bone is a dynamic tissue shaped by continuous remodelling* Metabolic disease weakens structure and increases fracture risk* Joint disease reflects interaction between load and inflammation* Infection disrupts architecture and resists eradication* Musculoskeletal tumours behave according to differentiation and growth pattern This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit drmanaankarray.substack.com/subscribe
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Patho 26: Bones, Joints, and Soft Tissue Tumors
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