<aside>

Hydroxyapatite Deposition Disease (HADD), also known as calcific tendinitis is a crystal-induced arthropathy caused by the deposition of basic calcium phosphate (BCP) crystals, primarily hydroxyapatite, in tendons, bursae, joints, or periarticular tissues.

</aside>

https://youtu.be/atkVJI4ZbDk

image.png

Pathophysiology


Feature Description
Crystal Type Basic calcium phosphate (BCP) — mainly hydroxyapatite
Site of deposition Tendons (esp. rotator cuff), periarticular tissues, bursae, joints
Pathogenesis Local trauma, ischemia → necrosis → dystrophic calcification
Cellular response Inflammatory reaction during crystal resorptive phase

Clinical Features


Aspect Description
Typical age 30–60 years
Common site Shoulder (supraspinatus tendon) > hip, elbow, wrist, knee
Symptoms Acute localized pain, swelling, restricted motion
Phases Formative → Resting → Resorptive (most painful)
Chronic form May present as ‣ (joint destruction)

Common sites of HADD and involvement:

Region Common Structures Affected
Shoulder Supraspinatus > infraspinatus, subscapularis
Hip Gluteus medius/minimus tendons
Knee Quadriceps or popliteus tendon
Wrist Flexor carpi ulnaris
Elbow Common extensor or flexor tendon

Radiology


<aside>

Calcific tendinitis appears as a calcific density near tendon insertions, especially around the rotator cuff tendons

</aside>

https://youtu.be/f51BZe-esp0

Modality Imaging features
XR Formative: Homogeneous, well-defined, round/ovoid calcification near tendon
Resting: Dense, stable calcific deposit
Resorptive: Ill-defined, fluffy, amorphous calcification; may migrate
US Echogenic focus: Bright, well-defined or shadowing lesion in tendon
Resorptive phase: Fragmented or liquified appearance, with Doppler signal
Soft-tissue inflammation: Bursal fluid, hyperemia on color Doppler
MR T1: Low signal intensity
T2: Variable: hypo- to hyperintense depending on phase
Bursal reaction: Subdeltoid bursitis, edema, synovial thickening
Tendon involvement: May show intratendinous edema, partial tear

![A-E AP internal rotation radiograph of the shoulder (A) shows well-defined, amorphous soft tissue calcification projecting over the posterior aspect of the greater tuberosity (formative/resting stage). Another AP shoulder radiograph (B) shows an ill-defined calcific deposit overlying the greater tuberosity (resorptive stage). Coronal PD-weighted fat-saturated MRI (C) of the right knee demonstrates focus of low signal intensity posterolaterally, interposed between femoral origin of the fibular collateral ligament and femoral origin of the lateral gastrocnemius with extensive reactive deep soft tissue edema. Axial (D) and sagittal (E) CT of the cervical neck shows coarse calcifications interior to the anterior arch of C1 and anterior to the dens of C2, consistent with HADD of the longus coli muscle

Patel, J., Tai, R., Sereni, C. et al. Hydroxyapatite deposition disease, an overlooked differential diagnosis in the emergency department: a case series and review of literature. Emerg Radiol 31, 229–238 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10140-024-02212-6](attachment:bfb8129d-cdf3-4e22-b614-853c16858f96:image.png)

A-E AP internal rotation radiograph of the shoulder (A) shows well-defined, amorphous soft tissue calcification projecting over the posterior aspect of the greater tuberosity (formative/resting stage). Another AP shoulder radiograph (B) shows an ill-defined calcific deposit overlying the greater tuberosity (resorptive stage). Coronal PD-weighted fat-saturated MRI (C) of the right knee demonstrates focus of low signal intensity posterolaterally, interposed between femoral origin of the fibular collateral ligament and femoral origin of the lateral gastrocnemius with extensive reactive deep soft tissue edema. Axial (D) and sagittal (E) CT of the cervical neck shows coarse calcifications interior to the anterior arch of C1 and anterior to the dens of C2, consistent with HADD of the longus coli muscle

Patel, J., Tai, R., Sereni, C. et al. Hydroxyapatite deposition disease, an overlooked differential diagnosis in the emergency department: a case series and review of literature. Emerg Radiol 31, 229–238 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10140-024-02212-6

Differentials