Metabolic Bone Diseases Flashcards

1
Q

What is cortical bone also called and what is the opposite of it? What does it make up?

A

Compact bone - makes up the outside of the shafts of the long bones (diaphysis) as well as the metaphysis / diaphysis

Trabecular bone / cancellous / spongy bone - opposite of compact / cortical bone -> makes up the metaphyseal area in the middle (head of the bone) and part of the central marrow cavity of long bones

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2
Q

What type of bone is the axial skeleton made up of mostly? Why is this relevant?

A

Mostly cancellous / spongy bone -> i.e. in the vertebral bodies. There is only a thin layer of compact bone on the outside.

Spongy bone has a much higher turnover rate (25% per year) than compact bone.

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3
Q

What is meant by coupling and balance in one formation?

A

Coupling - formation of bone occurs in coupling with resorption (osteoblasts / osteoclasts are coupled together)

Balance - resorption and formation of bone should be equal

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4
Q

What is the function of sclerostin protein? How might this become a drug target?

A

When Lrp5 binds Wnt, there is osteoblastic activity.

Sclerostin interacts with Lrp5 to prevent Lrp5 from interacting with Wnt.

If sclerostin can be targeted by a drug, bone formation can be increased.

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5
Q

What is the mechanism of action of estrogen in preventing bone loss? What drug is this similar to?

A

Estrogen upregulates osteoprotegerin, which acts as a decoy receptor for RANKL on osteoblasts. Prevents binding of RANK on osteoclasts to activate them.

Denosumab is a monoclonal antibody to RANKL.

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6
Q

What is the usual cause of osteoporosis and what will the lab values be?

A

Usual due to old age and menopause.

It is distinguished by other conditions which decrease bone density because lab values are normal:
Normal serum calcium, phosphate, PTH, and alkaline phosphatase.

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7
Q

What is the risk of osteoporosis ultimately based on and when is this achieved? How can this value be increased?

A

Based on peak bone mass determined by age 30

  • > increased by diet and exercise
  • > somewhat determined genetically by vitamin D receptor variants
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8
Q

How does bone mass change over a lifetime, and how do you make an objective diagnosis of it? Describe T vs Z score?

A

Decreases at about 1% per year -> everyone will get osteoposis eventually

Objective diagnosis: T score

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9
Q

How is diagnosis of osteoporosis made clinically?

A

Via a fragility fracture -> i.e. vertebral or hip fracture. Weight bearing structures are broken in situations when they normally shouldn’t be (low energy activities, i.e. walking)

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10
Q

What are some drugs which can cause osteoporosis?

A

Steroids - i.e. glucocorticoids
Anticonvulsants - decrease vitamin D levels
Thyroid replacement therapy - hyperthyroidism increases bone loss
Alcohol / smoking - poor nutrition status

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11
Q

What are common areas for fractures in osteoporosis and what is a common clinical symptom?

A

Vertebrae, hip, distal radius

Common symptom - Kyphosis w/height loss (remember 1” from Drivers’ license)

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12
Q

What agents are commonly used to treat osteoporosis?

A
  1. Bisphosphonates
  2. Denosumab
  3. Teriparatide - PTH analog given in bursts to stimulate osteoblasts
  4. Estrogens
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13
Q

What is the spectrum of CKD-MBD?

A

Chronic Kidney disease Mineral and Bone Disorder

  1. Increased bone turnover - osteitis fibrosa cystica
  2. Mixed uremic osteodystrophy
  3. Decreased bone turnover - adynamic bone disease

Overall leads to the condition of renal osteodystrophy with subperiosteal thinning and fragility of the bones

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14
Q

What causes autosomal dominant hypophosphatemic rickets?

A

A mutation in FGF23 molecule making it resistant to inactivation by PHEX

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15
Q

What is vitamin D deficient vs dependent vs resistant rickets?

A

Deficient - malabsorption / malnutrition of vitamin D - most common form

Dependent - absence of 1-alpha-hydroxylase enzyme

Resistant - vitamin D receptor mutation, most often X-linked

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16
Q

Are the bones soft or brittle in osteomalacia? What lab will be elevated (other than PTH)?

A

They are soft -> not enough calcium. This is adult-onset rickets.

Alkaline phosphatase will be elevated -> used by osteoblasts when they try to build bone (need basic environment to build bone, and acidic environment to destroy it)

17
Q

What is the general underlying pathophys of Paget disease of bone and does it happen everywhere or is it focal? Include the phases of disease.

A

Imbalance between osteoclast and osteoblast function -> a localized rather than systemic disease.

  1. Lytic phase - osteoclasts overwork without the permission of osteoblasts
  2. Mixed phase - osteoblasts begin working to rebuild bone ASAP
  3. Sclerotic - osteoclasts stop, but blasts keep building and cause bone overgrowth of poor quality
18
Q

What is the etiology of Paget disease and in what bones is it most severe?

A

Genetic in some, possible viral (measles)

Most severe in skull, pelvis, and long bones

19
Q

What pattern can be seen in lamellar bone in Paget disease, histologically and on X-ray?

A

Histology: Mosiac or puzzle piece pattern of bone with cement lines not having been sealed properly

X-ray: Thick, sclerotic bone which fractures easily

20
Q

What are common presenting symptoms of Paget disease? One of these is a lab value.

A
  1. Increasing hat size with lion-like faces -> craniofacial involvement
  2. Hearing loss -> impingement on cranial nerve + auditory foramen narrowing + damage to ossicles themselves sometimes
  3. Bone pain due to microfractures
  4. Isolated elevated alkaline phosphatase (no other labs abnormal).
21
Q

What are possible complications of Paget disease of bone?

A
  1. High output cardiac failure -> due to AV shunts formed in poorly formed bone
  2. Osteosarcoma
22
Q

What is the treatment for Paget disease of bone?

A

Bisphosphonates and calcitonin, especially early in the disease course

23
Q

What is the cause of tumor induced osteomalacia?

A

FGF23 secreting tumor -> paraneoplastic syndrome of renal phosphate wasting and decreased vitamin D levels.

24
Q

What is the cause of osteogenesis imperfecta and the usual inheritance pattern? What is the characteristic of the bone formed?

A

Usually autosomal dominant, due to decreased production of type I collagen.

Bones are very brittle with reduced mass, easy fractures.

25
Q

What are the clinical features associated with osteogenesis imperfecta? What might it be confused with?

A

BITE
B = Bones - multiple fractures
I = Eye -> blue sclera from choroidal veins showing (translucent connective tissue)
T = Teeth, - abnormal dentin
E = Ears- hearing loss, due to abnormal ossicles

Confused with child abuse -> look for ITE signs

26
Q

What is the pathophysiological problem is osteopetrosis?

A

petrosis = hard

Bones are abnormally hard and thick due to decreased resorption
-> bone fractures easily due to poor OSTEOCLAST function

27
Q

What are the clinical features of osteopetrosis?

A
  1. Easy fractures
  2. Bone fills the marrow space -> pancytopenia, extramedullary hematopoesis “myelophthisic process”
  3. Vision / hearing impairment -> impingement of cranial nerves from thickening of skull
  4. Hydrocephalus - foramen magnum narrowing
  5. Poor teeth eruption
28
Q

What is the most common enzyme deficiency underlying osteopetrosis and what other symptom is associated with this variant?

A

Carbonic anhydrase II deficiency (also used in proximal tubule)
-> needed for acid environment of Howship’s lacunae

Associated with a Type II (Proximal) renal tubular acidosis

29
Q

What is the treatment for osteopetrosis?

A

Bone marrow transplant -> osteoclasts are derived from monocytes and can be replaced

30
Q

What enzyme is deficient in hypophosphatasia? Why does this matter?

A

Tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNSALP)

TNSALP is required to cleave inorganic pyrophosphate and PLP (B6) outside of cells.

If inorganic pyrophosphate is not cleaved -> accumulation inhibits hydroxyapatite -> osteomalacia

If PLP is not cleaved -> B6 cannot enter cells -> severe CNS neurotransmitter deficits

31
Q

How severe is hypophosphatasia?

A

It’s a spectrum cuz there are over 200 TNSALPs which can be decreased and contribute to this condition.

Autosomal recessive forms -> very severe, infantile death

Autosomal dominant forms / some recessive forms -> less severe, adult onset

32
Q

What are some of the characteristic symptoms of childhood and adult hypophosphatasia?

A

Childhood -> craniosynostosis, rickets, premature loss of deciduous (baby) teeth

Adult -> easily fracturing metatarsals, mildly decreased TNSALP.

33
Q

What is the cause of autosomal dominant osteopetrosis type 1 (ADO1)? I’ll give you a hint: he’s obsessed with this pathway from earlier in the lecture.

A

LRP5 activating mutation -> activates the Wnt pathway, makes it immune to inactivation by interaction with sclerostin.

Remember, the Wnt pathway is involved in beta-catenin promotion of growth / bone formation in this case.

34
Q

What is the phenotype of ADO1?

A

Dense skull base

Wide jaw

Torus palatinus -> bone growth of palate.