Calcium, Parathyroid, Bone Flashcards

1
Q

iCa - what affects it

A

Decreased by:
Excess heparin
AlkaLOWsis

Increased by:
Acidosis
Longer storage/air exposure/higher temp
Prolonged tourniquet, forearm exercise

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2
Q

how does Mg affect PTH?

A

Hypo – decreases PTH secretion/action
Hyper – suppresses PTH secretion

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3
Q

PTH action?

A

Kidney: increase 1,25OH VitD production
->Increase Ca

Bone: increased bone turnover (osteoclast)

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4
Q

1,25OH Vit D action?

A

Gut: increases intestinal Ca absorption

Parathyroid: Feeds back to decrease PTH production

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5
Q

how does PTH affect kidneys and Ca?

A

increases distal tubular Ca reabsorption

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6
Q

what meds affect renal Ca excretion?

A

corticosteroids: increase Ca excretion

furosemide: increase Ca excretion

thiazide diuretics decrease Ca excretion

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7
Q

what is RANK

A

Receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B

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8
Q

osteoclasts
- function
- regulated by

A

bone resorption

RANK,
RANK ligand and
osteoprotegerin (OPG)

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9
Q

what happens when PTH acts on the PTH-R

A

PTH-R expresses:
more RANK-L
less OPG
This leads to more osteoclast action and more bone turnover

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10
Q

Hyper Ca DDX

A

Bone resorption:
- hyperPTH
– primary, MEN, familial isolated
- thyrotoxicosis
- vit D intoxication
- hypervitaminosis A
- immobilization

High Ca intake
- High Ca intakes for phosphate binding in renal failure
- milk alkali syndrome
- vitamin D intoxication

Other:
- subcutaneous fat necrosis
- malignancy (osteolytic mets, PTHrP)
- Williams syndrome
- Familial hypocaliuric hypercalcemia
- Meds: thiazides, lithium, theophylline
- Adrenal insufficiency
- pheochromocytoma
- hypophosphatasia
- rhabdomyolysis
- distal RTA
- Excess PTHrP (ie. tumour induced)
- hyperthyroidism

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11
Q

HyperCa in Neonates - DDx

A
  1. Excessive intake of calcium or Vit D’
    - Exogenous
    - Milk-alkali
    - Granulomatous diseases – ectopic production of calcitriol
  2. Phosphate depletion
  3. SC fat necrosis, Granulomatous disease (1-alpha hydroxylase)
  4. Williams syndrome
  5. Endocrinopathies:
    - primary adrenal insufficiency
    - severe hypothyroidism, or hyperthyroidism
  6. Malignancy
    - lytic bone lesions or PTHrP
  7. Meds:
    - thiazides, lithium, Vit A ,Ca, alkali etc.
  8. Genetics
  9. Other:
  10. Immobilization
  11. Persistent PTHrP

Maternal hypoparathyroidism
Maternal pseudohypoparathyroidism

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12
Q

Genetic causes of HyperCa in neonates

A
  1. CYP24A1
  2. Jansen metaphyseal chondroplasia (activating mutation of PTH-R)
  3. LCT: Congenital lactase and other disaccharide deficiencies (2/2 increased intestinal absorption of Ca promoted by the disaccharides)
  4. Infantile hypophosphatasia (TNSALP: mutation in AlkPhos)
  5. Mucolipidosis type II
  6. Blue diaper syndrome
    a. defect in absorption of tryptophan, ass/w hypercalcemia and nephrocalcinosis, pathogenesis unclear
  7. Antenatal Bartter syndrome type 1 (SLC12A1) and type 2 (KCNJ1)
  8. Distal RTA
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13
Q

Familial Hypocalciuric Hypercalcemia
- gene
- labs

A

Due to dominantly inherited INACTIVATING mutation in the CaSR

Benign elevation in Ca
PTH normal to slightly high

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14
Q

HyperCa management

A
  • fluid administration, restoration of intravascular volume
    ** cardiac monitoring
  • loop diuretcs
  • glucocorticosteroids
  • calcitonin
  • bisphosphonates
  • dialysis
  • dietary management
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15
Q

how do glucocorticoids decrease Ca

A
  • decrease intestinal Ca absorption
  • decrease 1,25OHD production by activated mononuclear cells in patients w granulomatous disease or lymphoma
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16
Q

how does calcitonin work?

A
  • inhibits bone resorption by interfering with osteoclast function
  • tachyphylaxis
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17
Q

how do bisphosphonates work?

A

potent inhibition of bone resorption by interfering with osteoclast recruitment and function

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18
Q

hungry bone syndrome

A

Severe hypocalcemia (due to sudden removal of PTH effect on osteoclast bone resorption)
Hypophos
HypoMg
High ALP

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19
Q

cinacalcet

A

Stimulates the CaSR

Binds to transmembrane region of CaSR causing a structural change - increases the sensitivity thereby, concomitantly lowering parathyroid hormone (PTH), serum calcium, and serum phosphorus levels, preventing progressive bone disease

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20
Q

Hypophosphatasia
- what is it
- presentation

A

Inherited deficiency of ALP

Rickets like bone disease and craniosynostosis

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21
Q

Hypocalcemia Sx in neonate

A

neuromuscular hyperexcitability:
irritability, hyperacusis, jitteriness, tremulousness, facial spasms, tetany, laryngospasm, and focal or generalized sei- zures

Nonspecific symptoms, such as apnea, tachycardia, cyanosis, emesis, and feeding problems may also occur.

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22
Q

Acute Hypocalcemia Sx

A

Neuromuscular
- Perioral or extremity paresthesias
- Muscle cramps, twitching and weakness
- Smooth muscle spasms (potentially causing biliary and intestinal cramps, dysphagia, premature birth, and detrusor muscle dysfunction).
- Latent tetany with + Chvostek and Trousseau
- Overt tetany, with carpopedal spasms, laryngospasm, bronchospasm

Neuropsychiatric
- Irritability, anxiety, depression, psychosis, mental confusion

Cardiovascular
- Rate-corrected QT interval (QTc) prolongation on EKG
- Bradycardia or ventricular arrhythmias
- Decrease in myocardial contractility, hypotension and heart failure

Ocular
- Papilledema

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23
Q

Chvostek’s sign

A

Percussing the facial nerve approximately 2 cm anterior to the ear, causes contraction of the ipsilateral facial muscles.

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24
Q

Trousseau’s sign

A

Inflate the BP cuff to approximately 20–30 mmHg above systolic for 3 minutes.
Characterized by carpal spasms, with adduction of the thumb, flexion of the metacarpophalangeal joint, extension of the interphalangeal joints, and flexion of the wrist

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25
Q

Chronic hypocalcemia sx

A

Neuropsychiatric Abnormalities
- Cognitive deficits and or dementia
- Extrapyramidal symptoms and signs that resemble Parkinson’s disease or chorea
- Calcification of basal ganglia (detected with greater sensitivity by CT scans than ordinary skull x-rays)
- Greater susceptibility to dystonic reactions induced by phenothiazines

Ocular
- Subcapsular cataracts

Dental
- Abnormal dentition

Ectodermal
- Dry skin

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26
Q

Neonatal hypocalcemia Ddx

A

maternal diabetes
maternal hyperparathyroidism
Vitamin D deficiency
High intake of alkali or magnesium sulfate
Use of anticonvulsants

prematurity/LBW
birth trauma/asphyxia
sepsis, toxemia
hypoparathyroidism (DiGeorge)
hypomagnesemia
Acute/chronic renal failure
excessive phos intake
inadequate calcium intake
vitamin D deficiency
hyperphosphatemia
pseudohypoparathyroidism
Vitamin D def or resistance
Osteopetrosis type II

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27
Q

mgmt hypocalcemia

A

IV Ca gluconate
Bolus first

Indications: sx’atic, QTc interval prolonged
EKG/cardiac monitor to assess QT interval. Observe for stridor.
Decrease phosphate in TPN if applicable

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28
Q

GNAS activating mutation
GNAS inactivating mutation

A

GNAS activating mutation = McCune Albright
GNAS inactivating mutation = Albright hereditary osteodystrophy

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29
Q

Pseudohypoparathyroidism
types

A

PHP1A – Albright hereditary osteodystrophy (AHO)

PHP1B – isolated resistance to PTH

PseudoPHP
Somatic phenotype of AHO without disorder of calcium metabolism

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30
Q

where is the GNAS gene imprinted

A

paternal allele imprinted in the kidney (ie silenced)

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31
Q

what is the AHO phenotype

A

short stature
round facies
obesity
brachydactyly
developmental delay
dental hypoplasia
basal ganglia calcifications
decreased bone density
subcutaneous calcifications
lenticular opacities
strabismus
cognitive impairment

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32
Q

PHP type 1a
- inheritance
- features

A
  • AD
  • Resistance to PTH
    -> hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, elevated PTH
    -> impaired urinary excretion of cyclic AMP and phosphate after administration of exogenous PTH
  • Resistance to TSH, gonadotropins, and GHRH
  • AHO
  • Less commonly reproductive abnormalities –> oligomenorrhea and infertility due to primary hypogonadism
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33
Q

PHP type 1b
- inheritance
- features

A
  • Sporadic
    – Only in the offspring of obligate female carriers in whom loss of maternal GNAS expression is present in the renal proximal tubule, resulting in selective proximal renal tubular resistance to PTH
    –Skeletal expression of both maternal and paternal GNAS is intact and hence bone formation is normal

Resistance to PTH
–Linked to GNAS locus but not due to mutations in the coding region of GNAS
–So no somatic phenotype
–Either due to improving or deletion of a methylated region on the GNAS locus (key regulator of the levels of GNAS transcription)

Can have resistance to TSH as well

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34
Q

Progressive osseous heteroplasia

A
  • Rare disorder involves the GNAS locus
  • Ectopic bone formation more severe than PHP1A
  • Begins in early childhood with ectopic bone forming in the dermis, muscles, and connective tissues
  • Can also have short stature, brachydactyly
  • No calcium or PTH abnormalities
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35
Q

inherited defects of CaSR

A

Inactivating – High PTH & high calcium
1. Neonatal severe hyperparathyroidism (AR)
2. Familial Benign Hypocalciuric hypercalcemia(AD)

Activating – Low PTH & low calcium
1. AD Hypocalcemic hypercalciuria

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36
Q

acquired defects of CaSR

A

Autoimmune hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (hyperparathyroidism)
- Blocking Ab vs. CaSR
- Acts like inactivating mutation

Autoimmune acquired hypoparathyroidism
- Stimulating Ab vs. CaSR
- Acts like activating mutation

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37
Q

what kin d of receptor is Vit D

A

nuclear steroid hormone receptor

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38
Q

vitamin D metabolism

A

skin/diet VitD

Liver 25 hydroxylase
makes 25OH Vit D

Kidney 1alpha hydroxylase
makes 1,25 (OH)2 Vit D

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39
Q

Abnormal mineralization of bone and cartilage
- names in growing children and adults

A

Osteomalacia – bone defect occurring after epiphyseal plates have closed
Rickets – occurs in growing bone (i.e. in children)

40
Q

Definition of rickets

A

1) Deficient mineralization at the growth plate

+ 2) architectural disruption of this structure.

41
Q

Rickets DDx

A
  • Vit D deficiency from lack of sun or dietary insufficiency
  • 25 hydroxylase deficiency in the liver
  • 1,25 hydroxylase deficiency in the kidney
    — Chronic renal failure
    — Low serum Ca
    — High PTH
    — Low 1,25 Vit D
    — Normal 25 Vit D
  • Vit D receptor deficiency
    — Also assoc to alopecia
  • Renal
42
Q

Rickets features

A
  • Rachitic rosary (prominence of costochondral junctions)
  • Frontal bossing
  • Delayed closure of fontanelles
  • Bowing of legs
  • Craniotabes
  • Delayed eruption of teeth with poor enamel formation, pitting
  • Harrison’s groove
  • Pectus carinatum
  • Scoliosis and kyphosis
  • Flaring of the metaphyses of the long bones
  • Poor growth, short stature
  • Muscle hypotonia  pronounced potbelly and waddling gait
  • Pathologic fracture
43
Q

Rickets X-ray

A

**Widening of growth plate (epiphyseal plate)
(proliferation of uncalcified cartilage and osteoid)
**Irregularity of the epiphyseal-metaphyseal junctions
(which gives the swelling along costochondral junctions = rachitic rosary)
** Early signs

  • Metaphyseal cupping, splaying and fraying (vs. sharp demarcation and slightly convexshape)
  • Osteopenia
  • Bowing of long bones (if wt bearing)
  • Pseudofractures (= Looser’s zones or Milkman’s fractures)
    —-unhealed microfractures at points of stress or at entry point of blood vessels into bone
44
Q

what does FGF23 do

A

will increase urinary phos excretion
Decrease 1,25 Vit D

45
Q

signs of low phosphate

A

Muscle weakness/dysfunction/fatigue
Neuro sx if acute hypophos (parathesias, altered mental status, seizure)

46
Q

Hypophosphatemia Ddx

A
  • Renal phosphate wasting (main cause)
  • Acute phosphate redistribution
    = Refeeding syndrome
  • High PTH
    = PTH inhibits phosphate reabsorption in proximal renal tubule
  • Decreased GI uptake / intestinal absorption
    =Starvation, e.g. AN
    =Vitamin D deficiency
    =Malabsorption
    =Inhibition of phosphate absorption (eg, antacids containing aluminum or magnesium, niacin)
    =Chronic alcoholism
    =Steatorrhea and chronic diarrhea
    =Vitamin D deficiency or resistance (VDDR1: mutation in 1-alpha-hydroxylase)
  • Renal losses / increased urinary excretion
    = Hyperparathyroidism – primary and secondary
    = Hypophosphatemic rickets (X-linked and AD)
    = Vit D Def or resistance
    = RTA (fanconi)
    = Diuretic therapy
    = Hypomagnesemia
    = Aldosteronism
    = HHRH : Hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets with hypercalciuria (LOF mutations in Na-Pi IIc)
    = Oncogenic osteomalacia
  • Intracellular shifts / internal redistribution
    = Alkalosis (metab or resp)
    = Increased insulin secretion (particularly refeeding)
    = Hungry bone syndrome
    = Administration of corticosteroids, epi, lactate, glucose, insulin
    = Recovery from hypothermia
  • Misc
    = Acute gout
    = Hypokalemia
    = Carcinoma – tumor induced osteomalacia
    = DKA
    = Alcohol withdrawal
47
Q

FGF23 mediated hypophosphatemia

A
  • x-linked hypophosphatemic rickets
  • AD hypophosphatemic rickets
  • AR hypophosphatemic rickets
  • McCune Albright Syndrome
  • Tumour induced (oncogenic osteomalacia)
48
Q

x-linked hypophosphatemic rickets
- treatment

A
  1. phosphate 20-40mg/kg/day div 4-6 times per day
  2. calcitriol 20-30ng/kg/day div BID

Burosumab (anti-FGF23 antibody) -decreases phosphate loss

49
Q

what are renal hypophosphatemia causes (FGF23 independent)

A
  • Fanconi syndrome
  • hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets w hypercalciuria
  • hyperparathyroidism
50
Q

how to calculate phosphate loss

A

TRP = tubular reabsorption of phosphate

TRP% = 1- [(urinary phosXserum Cr) / (serum phosxurinary creatinine) x 100

to get normal for age, use Bijvoet nomogram
higher when younger, lower when older

51
Q

hyperphosphatemia ddx

A
  • acute phosphate load
    —cell lysis (tumour lysis, rhabdo, crush injuries, hemolytic anemia) or exogenous phosphate administration (Fleets, high phosphate formulas in neonates)
  • acute extracellular phosphate shift
  • kidney
  • increased tubular phosphate reabsorption
    –hypoparathyroidism, acromegaly, vit D toxicity, bisphosphonate use, tumoral calcinosis
52
Q

Hyperphosphatemia Treatment

A

Acute
Often accompanied by hyperCa
Dialysis

Chronic
Low phosphate diet
Phosphate binding agents

53
Q

what is used for BMD

A

Z scores (standard deviation for age/sex)

54
Q

Osteoporosis Definition

A

EITHER
Vertebral compression fracture (in absence of local disease or high energy trauma)

OR

Clinically significant fracture (2 or more long bone # by age 10; 3 or more by age 19)
AND
low BMD

55
Q

Meds that can cause osteoporosis

A

Glucocorticoids
GnRH agonist
Anticonvulsants
Heparin
Immunosuppressants: MTX, Cyclosporine A
Lithium
Antiretrovirals
Diuretics
L-thyroxine suppressive therapy

56
Q

Low BMD Tx

A

Calcitonin (reduces bone resorption)
Tachyphylaxis
Bisphosphonates
IV
PO

57
Q

how do bisphosphonates work

A
  • synthetic, stable pyrophosphate analogues
  • bind to hydroxyapatite crystals in bone
  • inhibit osteoclast-mediated bone resorption
58
Q

pediatric uses of bisphosphonates

A
  • hypercalcemia
  • osteogenesis imperfecta
  • immobilization osteoporosis
  • Duchenne muscular dystrophy
  • idiopathic juvenile osteoporosis
  • juvenile Paget’s (idiopathic hyperphosphatasia)
  • juvenile arthritis
  • cerebral palsy
  • fibrous dysplasia
59
Q

side effects of bisphosphonates

A

Acute
- Fever
- Myalgia
- Abdominal pain, dyspepsia
- Vomiting
- Hypocalcemia, hypophosphatemia
- Bone pain
- Pain at infusion site
- Headache
- Allergic reaction
*Acute phase reaction usually only after 1st dose

Chronic
1. Inflammatory disorders of the eye
2. Osteonecrosis of the jaw (in the elderly)
3. Induced osteopetrosis

60
Q

How steroids cause osteoporosis

A
  1. inhibition of osteoblastogenesis
  2. increase in the rate of apoptosis of the osteoblast and osteocyte ◊ decrease in the rate of bone matrix formation and microfracture repair
  3. enhanced osteoclastogenesis
  4. decrease in the rate of apoptosis of the osteoclast ◊ permitting prolonged and excessive bone resorption
  5. decreased intestinal calcium absorption
61
Q

how to treat acute hypocalcemia

A

IV calcium bolus - recommended dose of elemental calcium is 5 to 7 mg/kg

10% calcium gluconate 1ml/kg (or 0.6)
10% CaCl 0.2 mL/kg (ONLY CENTRAL)

62
Q

what happens if you give Ca with phos or K

A

it precipitates

63
Q

meds for hypocalcemia chronic
aims for labs

A
  • Calcium: 50-75 mg/kg/day elemental calcium in divided doses
  • Calcitriol: Start 20-60 ng/kg/day in 2-4 doses OR start at 0.25 mcg/day and titrate up to effect

AIMS:
calcium low normal
phosphate high normal

64
Q

what is the % Elemental Calcium by supplement

A

Calcium carbonate 40%;
citrate 21%;
gluconate 9%;
lactate 13%

65
Q

HyperCa in older children

A
  • Hyperparathyroidism (primary: sporadic, associated with MEN1, 2A)
  • FHH (familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia)
  • Post-renal transplant
  • Lithium
  • Tertiary hyperparathyroidism (chronic renal failure)
  • Humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy
  • PTHrP (solid tumours, adult T-cell leukemia syndrome)
  • Ectopic secretion of PTH (rare)
  • Local osteolytic hypercalcemia (multiple myeloma, leukemia, lymphoma)
  • Sarcoidosis/other granulomatous disease
  • Thyrotoxicosis (hyperthyroid bone disease)
  • Adrenal insufficiency
  • Pheochromocytoma
  • VIPoma
  • Drug-induced (vitamin A intoxication, vit D intoxication, thiazide diuretics, lithium, milk-alkali syndrome, estrogens/androgens, tamoxifen (in BRCA))
  • immobilization
  • idiopathic hypercalcemia of infancy (not relevant here because older kid)
  • subcutaneous fat necrosis
66
Q

acquired problems with CaSR

A

-Autoimmune hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (in APS1) → anti CaSR which inhibit stimulation of CaSR by calcium and result in hyperparathyroidism

-Acquired autoimmune hypoparathyroidism - acquired antibodies against extracelular portion of CaSR

67
Q

dose of pamidronate

A

pamidronate 0.5-2mg/kg over 4 hours

68
Q

differentiating features between FHH and primary hyperparathyroidism

A

i) No findings on ultrasound
ii) Lower PTH
iii) Higher urinary calcium excretion
iv) AD family history
v) Hypercalcemia is present from young age (from birth if investigations are done)
vi) Elevated magnesium

69
Q

What medication can modulate CaSR? How does it work?

A

i) Magnesium: binds to CaSR and causes reduced PTH secretion and lower calcium
ii) Cinacalcet: Can upregulate CaSR expression

70
Q

Causes of osteoporosis

A

Chronic illness
a. Malignancy (leukemia, lymphoma)
b. Rheumatologic disorders
c. Anorexia nervosa
d. Cystic fibrosis
e. Inflammatory bowel disease
f. Renal disease
g. Transplantation
h. Other: primary biliary cirrhosis, cyanotic congenital heart disease, thalassemia, malabsorption syndromes, celiac disease, epidermolysis bullosa

Neuromuscular disorders
a. Cerebral palsy
b. Rett syndrome
c. Duchenne muscular dystrophy
d. Spina bifida
e. Spinal muscular atrophy

Endocrine and reproductive disorders
a. Disorders of puberty
b. Turner syndrome
c. Growth hormone deficiency
d. Hyperthyroidism
e. Hyperprolactinemia
f. Athletic amenorrhea
g. Cushing syndrome
h. Type 1 diabetes

Iatrogens
a. Glucocorticoids
b. Methotrexate
c. Cyclosporine
d. Heparin
e. Radiotherapy
f. GnRH agonist
g. Medroxyprogesterone acetate (long-term use)
h. L-Thyroxine suppressive therapy
i. Anticonvulsants

Inborn errors of metabolism
a. Lysinuric protein intolerance
b. Glycogen storage disease
c. Galactosemia
d. Gaucher disease

71
Q

osteogenesis imperfecta
- what protein is implicated
- features of the protein that are important for normal function

A

type 1 collagen

most commonly caused by mutations in genes encoding the alpha-1 and alpha-2 chains of type I collagen or proteins involved in posttranslational modification of type I collagen

i. Has to form helix
ii. Helices have to form triple helix

72
Q

features of osteogenesis imperfecta

A

i. Blue sclera
ii. Fractures of long bones
iii. Osteopenia
iv. Hearing loss
v. Bony deformities
vi. Wormian bones
vii. Triangular facies
viii. Abnormal skull formation
ix. Triangular face
x. Easybruising
xi. Wormian bones (small irregular bones along the cranial sutures)

73
Q

how do bisphosphonates help in OI

A

i. Reduce fractures
ii. Reduce bone pain
iii. Increase mobility
iv. Reduce hypercalcemia
v. Prevent long bone deformities and scoliosis
vi. Decreased bone turnover

74
Q

what are PTH mediated causes of rickets?

A

 Vitamin D deficiency
 Calcium deficiency
 Disorders of vitamin D metabolism
• 1 alpha hydroxylase deficiency
• vitamin D receptor defect

PTH increased, increased renal excretion of phosphate

75
Q

what causes of are FGF23 mediated rickets

A

 X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH)
 Autosomal dominant hypophosphatemic rickets (ADHR)
 Autosomal recessive hyophosphatemic rickets (ARHR-1)
 Tumor-induced osteomalacia (TIO)
 Osteoglophonic dysplasia (FGFR1)
 Generalized arterial calcifications of infancy (ARHR-2)
 Raine syndrome (ARHR-3)
 Fibrous dysplasia

76
Q

important factors for a healthy adolescent to attain peak bone mass

A

• Gonadal steroids (testosterone, estradiol)
• Weight bearing and resistance physical activity
• Adequate calcium intake (1300mg/day – for 9-18 y.o)
• Optimize vitamin D level
• Adequate nutrient and caloric intake
• Avoid smoking and alcohol
• Physical activity
• Race – African American females tend to achieve higher peak bone mass than white females

77
Q

imaging in hyperparathyroidism

A

used only to differentiate an adenoma from hyperplasia.

The imaging techniques available include:
99T-sestamibi,
ultrasound,
CT,
or MRI.

In peds we mainly do ultrasound or 99T-sestamibi.
99T-sestamibi is more sensitive for adenoma so it preferred, but if there is hyperplasia of multiple glands it is hard to detect and ultrasound is better.

78
Q

what are risk factors for hungry bone syndrome

A

high ALP,
parathyroid adenoma >5 cm,
very elevated calcium and PTH
the osteitis fibrosa cystica

79
Q

what are the bone lesions in hyperparathyroidism?

A

Osteitis fibrosa cystica are the bone lesions seen in the phalanges and skull in hyperparathyroidism

80
Q

what are RF for SCFN

A

mec aspiration, preeclampsia, maternal DM, therapeutic cooling

81
Q

how long can nodules appear in SCFN

A

6 weeks

82
Q

William syndrome Ca effects ?

A

High Ca
Low PTH
Low Vit D

elastin gene

83
Q

what is craniosyostosis seen in

A

X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets

84
Q

what are causes of Bone resorption

A
  • hyperPTH
    – primary, MEN, familial isolated
  • thyrotoxicosis
  • vit D intoxication
  • hypervitaminosis A
  • immobilization
85
Q

preferred site for DEXA in children

A

lumbar spine and total body

86
Q

causes of Rickets

A

i. Nutritional - Vitamin D &/or Calcium deficiency
ii. Hypophosphatemic rickets
iii. Renal rickets (due to renal insufficiency)

87
Q

acute hypoCa - what to watch for

A

laryngospasm

88
Q

how does hypoMg cause hypocalcemia

A

inducing resistance to parathyroid hormone (PTH) and by diminishing its secretion

88
Q

how does hypoMg cause hypocalcemia

A

inducing resistance to parathyroid hormone (PTH) and by diminishing its secretion

89
Q

endocrinopathies that can cause hyperCa

A
  1. primary adrenal insufficiency
  2. severe hypothyroidism, or hyperthyroidism
90
Q

what is Blomstrand chondroplasia

A

(PTHR1–lossoffunction mutation)
PTH resistance

91
Q

Causes of hypoparathyroidism

A

CONGENITAL
1. Transient neonatal
a. delayed developmental maturation of parathyroid glands (resolves in first few wks of life)
b. Maternal hyperparathyroidism

  1. Dysgenesis/agenesis of the parathyroid glands
    ex: DiGeorge syndrome (TBX1) – hypoplasia of the parathyroid glands
  2. Insensitivity to PTH
    a. Blomstrand chondroplasia(PTHR1–lossoffunction mutation) - PTH resistance
    b. Pseudohypoparathyroidism - resistance
    i. Type IA, IB, and IC
    ii. Type II
    iii. Pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism
    c. Hypomagnesemia
    d. Dyshormonogenesis

ACQUIRED
1. Autoimmune, APS type1 (AIRE1)
2. Activating Ab’s to the CaSR
3. Postsurgical
4. Radiation destruction
5. Infiltrative – excessive iron (hemochromatosis, thalassemia) or copper (Wilson) deposition, granulomatous or neoplastic invasion, amyloidosis,
sarcoidosis
6. Hypomagnesemia

92
Q

Jansen’s metaphyseal dysplasia

A

activating mutation PTHR

93
Q

5 factors for osteoporosis in DMD

A

1) reduced muscle tension on bone
2) steroids
3) delayed puberty
4) chronic inflammation (attempted repair of damaged muscle fibres)
5) immobility

94
Q

Risk factors for metabolic bone disease of prematurity

A
  • GA <28w
  • BW <1500g
  • TPN >4 weeks
  • CLD
  • long term diuretics
  • NEC grade 2 or more
  • fluid restriction
95
Q

pathophys of MBD of prem

A

low Ca -> high PTH -> low phos -> decreased apoptosis -> hypertrophic chondrocytes

*low TRP