osteoporosis Flashcards

1
Q

define osteoporosis

A

skeletal disorder characterised by compromised bone strength and predisposing a person to an increased risk of fractures

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2
Q

what happens in Osteoporosis?

A

bones are weak and brittle - new bone is not generated as fast as it is degraded hence leaving a deficit

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3
Q

what appearance does OP have?

A

hollow bones

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4
Q

what are the general symptoms of OP?

A

back pain, stooped posture, early menopause, aches and tiredness

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5
Q

what suggest a patient has OP?

A

age, having a T score of less than -2.5, low calcidol, high parathrome

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6
Q

what is a T score in relation to OP?

A

T score is the average bone mass of your specific age category and -2.5 is more than 2 standard deviations away

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7
Q

what is calcidol?

A

form of vit D - vital for bones

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8
Q

what is the purpose of parathormone?

A

is controls Ca2+ and having too much of PTH causes release of ca from bones

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9
Q

what do osteoclasts do in bones?

A

they reabsorb bone cells for degradation

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10
Q

what is the function of osteoblasts?

A

they generate new bone cells

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11
Q

what is the function of osteocytes?

A

they are the longest living bone cell

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12
Q

what are the treatments for OP?

A
  1. anti-reabsorptives
  2. PTH analogues
  3. hormone therapy
  4. exercise
  5. cutting out smoking and drinking
  6. surgery
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13
Q

what is the function of anti-reabsorptives in treating OP with examples?

A

they affect osteoclasts and prevent them reabsopring and degrading the bone
eg denosumab

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14
Q

what does denosumab do?

A

it is a monoclonal antibody that prevents osteoclast precursors

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15
Q

give an example of an analogue of PTH?

A

teriparatade

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16
Q

What prevents the mechanotransduction of osteocytes?

A

anti- sclerosis antibody

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17
Q

what research has been done in NCL relating OP?

A

using 1000F study to assess sedentary behaviours and bone strength

18
Q

what links was found between bone strength and sedentary behaviours in the NCL research?

A

more sedentary time = less bone mineral density (BMD)

19
Q

what does PHE suggest about physical activity levels in the north east?

A

NE england has the largest proportion of inactive adults in the UK of which 32% of adults are doing less than 30 min of moderate exercise per week

20
Q

how much does fractures cost the NHS yearly?

A

£2.3bn a year

21
Q

why are women at most risk especially in there 50s?

A

menopause causes a drop in oestrogen and this lowers BMD

22
Q

what is the risk of fracture for a woman in her 50s?

A

50% before she dies

23
Q

what is osteogenesis imperfecta?

A

brittle bone disease

24
Q

what is the prevalence of osteogenesis imperfecta seen at birth?

A

1/ 20,000

25
Q

what is the prevalence of osteogenesis imperfecta that is not detected at birth?

A

1/ 21,000

26
Q

what does osteogenesis imperfecta entail?

A

it is a monogenic autosomal dominant disease that affects collagen synthesis, it is very dangerous intra uterine

27
Q

what is the risk of fractures with a T score of -2.5?

A

16% risk of femur fracture and 30% risk of femur/ spine and wrist

28
Q

a 2017 study expanded further into surgery for OP, what happens during an arthroplasty?

A

in hip surgery, metal plate and screws on bone cortex and hollow bony trabecula.

29
Q

what year was the 1000F study regarding sedentary behaviours and bone strength

A

2019

30
Q

what year was the study about hip surgery from?

A

2017

31
Q

how many in the UK are affected by OP?

A

3 million

32
Q

what can measure bone mass density?

A

dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA)

33
Q

what is an implication of frequent use of glucocorticoids?

A

leads to lower bone mass density

34
Q

what percentage does osteocytes make up of all bone tissue?

A

90-95%

35
Q

why is there activation of bone remodelling over the course of a lifetime?

A

to provide strength and elasticity to skeleton

36
Q

what activates osteoblasts?

A

growth hormone, interleukins, parathyroid

37
Q

what is thought to essentially initiate the activity of osteblasts?

A

osteocytes by fluid changes or microcracks within deep bone structure and sends paracrine signals to osetoblasts

38
Q

how does the wnt/ beta catenin pathway link to OP?

A

critical to osteoblast differentiate

39
Q

what is oestrogens function within OP?

A

helps promote osteoblast activity

40
Q

what is the principal regulator of bone mechanosensation and transduction?

A

osteocytes

41
Q

what affects does osteoclast activation have on osteoblasts?

A

impacts normal function - they both impact each other

42
Q

what effect does the interaction between oestrogen receptors and wnt/ beta catenin?

A

impacts the coordination of mechanical stimulation