Harris lines
Growth arrest lines, also known as growth resumption lines, Harris lines or Park lines, are alternating transverse rings of sclerosis at the metaphysis of a long bone.
Pathology
The radiographic finding occurs from alternating cycles of osseous growth arrest and growth resumption. This appears to result from pathologic levels of stress during bone development (e.g. disease, malnutrition).
The phenomenon has been described as originating from "osteoblasts, deprived of a longitudinally oriented template of calcifIed cartilage matrix, [continuing] their activities on the horizontally disposed template produced by the undersurface of the epiphyseal cartilage" .
Some contend that the lines are not necessarily indicators of development stress, but may be a variation of normal .
Histology
Trabeculae immediately above and below a growth arrest line are normal, but the Harris line has three histological characteristics:
- non-lamellar appearance on histology
- a complete lack of osteocyte lacunae
- presence of irregularly distributed tubular structures
Radiographic features
- radiopaque transverse line in the metaphyses of long bones
History and etymology
First described by H. Harris in 1927.
Differential diagnosis
Siehe auch:
- Osteogenesis imperfecta
- Stressfraktur
- Osteopetrose
- zebra stripes
- Insuffizienzfraktur
- dichte metaphysäre Bänder
- alternating radiolucent and radiodense metaphyseal lines
- durch Bisphosphonattherapie induzierte Linien