Lecture 19: Nutrition and the ageing bone Flashcards

1
Q

Definition osteoporosis =

A

Progressive, systemic skeletal disease characterized by low bone mass and micro architectural deterioration of bone tissue, with consequent increase in bone fragility and susceptibility of fracture.

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2
Q

DEXA can pick up X. Some say density as well, some say not

A

low bone mass

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3
Q

What do osteoclasts and blasts do?

A

Osteoclast = responsible for resorbing bone (turquoise). They munch away at the surface, leaving a cavity.
Osteoblast = makes new bone matrix

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4
Q

Why need osteoblasts and clasts?

A
  • Enables bone to adapt to mechanical loading, - repair damage
  • regulate circulating Ca levels
  • contribute to acid/base balance
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5
Q

Target drug strategies =

A

regulators of bone turnover

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6
Q

Serum calcium/blood values: good marker for calcium homeostasis?

A

No, The body will do anything to ensure this calcium levels will remain in a small range in the blood. There is no functional marker

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7
Q

Explain calcium homeostasis

A

When blood levels fall, there is an action on PTH:

  1. stimulates Ca uptake in kidneys -> active vit D increases Ca uptake in intestines
  2. stimulates ca release from bones
    3 blood ca levels rise
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8
Q

The three calciotrophic hormones are:

A
  1. PTH
  2. 1-25-D (active vit D)
  3. Calcitonin (takes calcium from blood and puts it back in bone)
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9
Q

Conflicting data: dietary calcium associated, or not associated with risk of fracture.
what can you conclude?

A

More calcium is not necessarily better, but avoiding a low calcium intake is beneficial for the ageing skeleton.

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10
Q

How do you know whether the sun has the right UVB exposure to make vit D

A

Shadow shorter than your height? Right vit D level!

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11
Q

Why is the name vit D confusing?

A

Vitamin = vital amine, but vit D = pro-hormone. Main source is not diet, but UV exposure

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12
Q

Explain vit D uptake by the sun

A

UVB: absorbed by cholesterol in the skin -> previt D3 -> Vit D3 ->(liver) 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (clacidiol) ->(kidney) Calcitriol (active vit D)

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13
Q

What is the marker for vit D status?

A

25-hydroxyvitamin D3

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14
Q

Can never reach vit D toxic levels via sun, true/false?

A

true

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15
Q

UK guidelines for vit D = 10 microgr/day = less than European committee and EFSA. UK = prevent deficiency, the rest = optimal health.

A

ok

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16
Q

Cycles of rising and falling vit D: bad for health?

A

If your change in vit D is very high, lost more bone and had increased bone resorption.

17
Q

vit D3 vs D2?

A

bioavailability seems to be higher in D3. Elevates D3 levels.

18
Q

Vit K: vital for bone health. Why?

A

 Vit K is vital: it produces an AA called Gla which acts like glue to keep the calcium in bone.

Mechanistically, vit K is very important for bone. But in RCTs, vit K story is not showing a benefit.

19
Q

How does bone help in maintaining the proper pH in the blood? What is the downside of this?

A

Bone is a huge reserve as alkaline salts. Using these salts to buffer the pH of the blood, might result in gradual decline in bone known as osteoporosis.

20
Q

How does it work that bone buffering can lead to osteoporosis?

A

When reducing the pH medium in which bone cells operate, bone cells become hyperactive and you lose a lot of bone. As we get older, we become more acidic.

21
Q

DASH study: increasing fruit & veg intake significantly decreased amount of calcium that is lost.

A

nois