Osteochondrosis is defined as a failure in the endochondral ossification process. There is no consensus on the etiology, with multiple factors involved. The initial events in the pathogenesis remain uncertain, but evidence points to ischemic necrosis of the ossification center, located in the bone epiphysis. Each osteochondrosis has a homonymous clinical diagnosis assigned based on location. The most affected areas include the hip (Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease), knee (Osgood-Schlatter disease, Sinding-Larsen-Johansson disease), foot (Sever’s disease), elbow (Panner’s disease) and spine (Scheuermann’s disease). The most common clinical manifestations are mechanical pain and functional limitation during or after physical activity. Many injury prevention strategies involve educating young people, coaches, family members and monitoring symptoms. Early diagnosis and a structured approach allow, in most cases, clinical resolution and avoid long-term sequelae. Osteochondrosis was first described by König in 1887 and, despite more than a century of studies, there are still many challenging questions to elucidate to better understand this pathology.