Phosphorus homeostasis Flashcards

1
Q

where is phosphorus found?

A

Bone - 85%
Intracellular organic molecules - 14%
Extracellular fluid - 1%

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2
Q

Describe the relationship between Ca and phosphorus

A

Law of mass action:
- Ca and PO4 levels kept at levels suitable for bone mineralisation but not soft tissue mineralisation
Food high in phosphorous is usually low in Ca
Connected control mechanisms - Calcitriol, PTH

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3
Q

Describe the absorption of phosphate

A

Intestinal phosphate absorption promoted by calcitriol
Renal resorption mainly in PCT

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4
Q

Describe the protective losses caused by PTH

A

PTH => Ca and phosphorous increase from bone
PTH => increased phosphorous excretion from renal tubules
This prevents phosphorous from taking iCa and making it unavailable

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4
Q

Describe the control of phosphate excretion

A

PTH promotes renal PO4 losses
FGF-23:
- secreted by bone in response to PO4
- anti PTH - inhibits PTH stimulating calcitriol formation => prevents phosphorous being resorbed though gut
- promotes phosphate loss through urine

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5
Q

What factors control PO4

A

Dietary intake and absorption
Calcitriol
PTH
renal tubular resorption
Phosphatonins/FGF-23

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6
Q

What causes hyperphosphataemia?

A

Reduced GFR => reduced clearance
Vit D toxicity => increased intestinal absorption
Hypoparathyroidism - no PTH so no encouragement of renal PO4 loss
Young and growing
Increased bone turnover

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7
Q

Describe the action of acute hyperphosphataemia

A

=> hypocalcaemia => tetany

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8
Q

Describe the effects of secondary renal hyperparathyroidism

A

Renal disease:
- reduced GFR
- reduced clearance of PO4
- increased serum PO4 => FGF-23
- Decreased iCa in blood
- Increased PTH => bone resorption
- polyuria due to Ca losses
- tubular damage and FGF-23 => decreased calcitriol
- poor appetite and decreased calcitriol => poor Ca uptake

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9
Q

What is the outcome of secondary hyperparathyroidism?

A

Bone demineralisation
Rubber jaw - soft mandible

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10
Q

Give an example of the effects of secondary hyperparathyroidism in horses

A

Bran-disease/big head
Increased bone resorption => bone loss from skull => swelling

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11
Q

How is PO4 restricted in renal failure management?

A

PO4 restricted diets
PO4 binders - prevent resorption:
- oral antacids (CaCO3)

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12
Q

Describe the effect of hyperphosphataemia in ruminants

A

Urolithiasis:
- high grain diets, dietary phosphorous => phosphate containing uroliths
- alkaline urine
- reduced water intake
- may get obstruction (bladder stones)
- surgical therapy needed

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13
Q

what causes hypophosphataemia?

A

Increased PTH promotes clearance
Dietary deficiency
Milk fever
Lack of calcitriol - not enough Vit D from food and sunlight
Insulin promotes phosphorous uptake into cells
Diuresis
Fanconi syndrome

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14
Q

Describe the clinical signs of hypophosphataemia

A

Large skeletal sores
Long term => osteomalacia, deformity, pain
Muscle:
- weakness, pain
- glycolysis
RBCs:
- haemolytic anaemia
- Increased oxygen binding => hypoxia
Dairy:
- poor growth
- poor milk yields
- low fertility

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15
Q

Describe diagnostic tests of phosphorous disorders

A

Serum/plasma phosphorous (beware false increase in haemolysis due to PO4 in RBCs)
Urea, creatinine - evidence of renal dysfunction
Total Ca, iCa, albumin
Fractional excretion of phosphorous
FGF-23 - early marker of renal dysfunction