metabolic bone disease Flashcards

1
Q

What endocrine disorders can contribute to osteoporosis?

A

-hyperthyroid, high cortisol, low estrogen, hyperparathyroidism

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2
Q

In addition to bisphosphonates, what treatments are available for osteoporosis?

A

selective estrogen receptor modulators like raloxifene or pulsatile teriparatide (recombinant parathyroid hormone) stimulate osteoblasts and bone remodeling. This can be used for up to 2 yrs
(possibly denosumab? monoclonal antibody against RANK-L)

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3
Q

What is osteopetrosis?

A

increased bone density caused by impaired osteoclast activity

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4
Q

What are clinical manifestations and labs seen with osteopetrosis?

A

pts have incr fracture risk, possible blindness or deafness, neuro sx from compression of nerves. they have decr Hgb and hct, incr acid phosphatase, and increased CK.

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5
Q

What is the treatment for Paget’s disease of bone?

A

-bisphosphonates, calcitonin

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6
Q

what are the lab findings in paget’s disease of bone?

A

normal calcium and phosphorus, incr ALP, incr hydroxyproline in the urine

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7
Q

What are the findings from joint aspiration in patients with gout?

A

-needle-shaped negatively birefringent crystals and WBCs

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8
Q

What are medical options for treating chronic gout?

A

allopurinol (inhibits uric acid formation) or probenecid (inhibits kidney uric acid resorption)

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9
Q

What are the crystals made of in pseudogout?

A

CPPD: calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate deposition disease (these positively birefringent and look like rhomboids)

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10
Q

What other disease are associated with pseudogout?

A

in familial cases, look for DM and hyperparathyroidism

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11
Q

What is the most common cause of septic arthritis (pathogen-wise)? What about other pathogens?

A

S. aureus (but it coud be gonorrhea). Can also be gram negative rods if pts are immunosuppressed or otherwise ill

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12
Q

What are complications of septic arthritis and what are risk factors that increase the likelihood of those complications?

A
  • cartilage destruction due to body’s own inflammatory response
  • even greater risk if pt has preexisting arthritis
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13
Q

What are the lab findings for septic arthritis?

A

-incr WBCs (often >50,000), usually PMN predominant, decreased glucose, may or may not have positive gram stain and culture (gonorrhea in particular often has false negatives)

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14
Q

How many leukocytes typically seen in inflammatory arthropathies (RA, gout, pseudogout)

A

-5,000 to 50,000

Note that for osteoarthritis or trauma usually less than 2,000 WBCs/mm3

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15
Q

What is the tx for septic joint?

A
  • incision and drainage (unless for gonorrhea, in which case not always needed)
  • abx:
  • penicillinase resistant penicillin for S aureus, ceftriaxone and doxycyline for gonorrhea, aminoglycoside for gram negative
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16
Q

What is the most common pathogen of osteomyelitis?

A

S. aureus. This is even true for patients with sickle cell disease (when you should think about salmonella too) or IV drug abuse (when you should think about pseudomonas)
pseudomonas is the second most common pathogen

17
Q

When must I&D be performed for osteomyelitis?

A

abscess inside the bone or in surrounding tissue

18
Q

What are the 3 stages of lyme disease?

A
  1. Early localized: fever, chills, erythema chronicum migrans
  2. early disseminated stage: myocarditis (wks-months), cardiac arrhythmias and heart block, bell’s palsy, neuropathies, aseptic meningitis
  3. late disseminated stage: months-yrs, see chronic synovitis, monoarthritis or oligoarthritis, polyneuropathies, subacute encephalitis