Bone Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

what is osteoporosis

A

progressive systemic skeletal disease characterised by low bone mass and micro architectural deterioration of bone tissue with subsequent increase in bone fragility and susceptibility to fracture

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2
Q

where does bone remodelling occur

A

at bone remodelling units

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3
Q

what is the process of bone remodelling

A

osteoclasts resorb the bone
osteoclasts are replaced by osteoblasts which fill the cavity by putting down osteoid that is mineralised to form new bone

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4
Q

what causes osteoporosis

A

relative or absolute increase in resorption over formation that leads to bone loss (more osteoclast than blast activity)

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5
Q

what architechtural changes occur in osteoporosis

A

decrease in trabecular thickness and connections between vertical trabeculae

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6
Q

what causes peak bone mass

A

genetics, body weight, sex hormones, diet, exercise

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7
Q

what causes bone loss

A
sex hormone deficiency 
body weight 
genetics 
diet 
immobility 
diseases 
drugs- glucocorticoids, aromatase inhibitors
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8
Q

how do the dexa scans work

A

compares your bone score with what is should have been at its best as with average for young adult reference

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9
Q

what are the parameters for DEXA scans

A

Normal : BMD within 1 SD of the young adult reference mean

Osteopenia (low bone mass) :BMD >1 SD below the young adult mean but <2.5 SD below this value

Osteoporosis : BMD ≥ 2.5 SD below the young adult mean

Severe osteoporosis : BMD ≥2.5 SD below the young adult mean with fragility fracture

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10
Q

who should get dexa scans

A

patients over 50 with low trauma fracture

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11
Q

what are the modifiable risk factors for fragility fractures

A
BMD
Alcohol
Weight
Smoking
Physical inactivity
Pharmacological risk factors
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12
Q

what are the secondary causes of low bone density

A

Endocrine e.g. hyperthyroidism, hyperparathyroidism, Cushing’s disease
Gastrointestinal e.g. coeliac disease, IBD, chronic liver disease, chronic pancreatitis
Respiratory e.g. CF, COPD
Chronic kidney disease

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13
Q

what is the lifestyle advice for osteoporosis

A
High intensity strength training
Low-impact weight-bearing exercise (standing, one foot always on the floor) 
Avoidance of excess alcohol
Avoidance of smoking
Fall prevention
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14
Q

what are the dietary sources of calcium

A
dairy 
bread and cereals 
fish with bones 
nuts 
green veg 
beans
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15
Q

what are the drug treatments for osteoporosis

A

Calcium & vitamin D supplementation
Bisphosphonates
Denosumab
Teriparatide
HRT
SERMS (Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators)
Testosterone (hypogonadism in a younger man)

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16
Q

what are bisphosphonates

A

ant resorbtive agents

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17
Q

what is denosumab

A

monoclonal antibody that targets and binds with high affinity and specificity to RANKL (receptor activator of nuclear factor-kB ligand)- inhibits the development and activity of osteoclasts

18
Q

how do corticosteroids cause a decrease in bone density

A

Reduction of osteoblast activity and lifespan
Suppression of replication of osteoblast precursors

Reduction in calcium absorption

Inhibition of gonadal and adrenal steroid production

19
Q

what is pagets disease

A

abnormal osteoclastic activity followed by increased osteoblastic activity - abnormal bone structure with reduced strength and increased fracture risk

20
Q

what bones are commonly affected by pagets

A

long bones, pelvis, lumbar spine and skull (can cause hearing loss)

21
Q

how does pagets present

A

bone pain, deformity, deafness, compression neuropathies

22
Q

what cancer is a rare complication of pagets

A

osteosarcoma

23
Q

what are the findings of pagets

A

isotope bone scan
raised alk phos
normal LFTs

24
Q

what is the treatment for pagets

A

bisphosphonates if pain not responding to analgesia

25
Q

how can you FEEL if pagets is active

A

feels hot

26
Q

what is osteogenesis imperfecta

A

genetic conditions affect bone

27
Q

what mutations cause oestogenesis imperfecta

A

mutations of type 1 collagen genes (COL1A1, COL1A2)

autosomal dominant

28
Q

what signs can osteogenesis imperfecta be associated with

A

blue sclera and dentinogenesis imperfecta

29
Q

what is the treatment for osteogenesis imperfecta

A

no cure –only fracture fixation, surgery to correct deformities, bisphosphonates

30
Q

what is the T score in dexa scans

A

deviation away from young adult mean

31
Q

what is the Z score in dexa scans

A

score that is age matched

32
Q

why is vitamin D important

A

need it to absorb calcium

33
Q

what are the signs of vitamin D deficiency

A

bony pain, muscle weakness, proximal myopathy

34
Q

what hormones are found in primary hyperparathyroidism

A

high PTH
high alk phos
high bilirubin
hypercalcaemic

high calcium should suppress PTH, will have endogenous production of PTH- e.g. thyroid adenoma

35
Q

what symptoms in hyperparathyroidism

A
osteoporosis)
Kidney stones.
Excessive urination and thirst.
Abdominal pain.
Tiring easily or weakness.
Depression or forgetfulness.
Bone and joint pain.
36
Q

what cancers metastasise to bone

A

breast, bowel, bronchus (lung), renal, prostate

37
Q

what biochem would be seen in bone metastasis

A

calcium high
PTH will be low, appropriate suppression by high calcium
If PTH was high might be PTHrp being released by the tumour

38
Q

what medication to bring down calcium

A

bisphonphonates

39
Q

what is seen on x ray

A

cortico thickening, coarse trabecular patterning

40
Q

when is alk phos raised on its own

A

pagets

41
Q

high alk phos + pain =

A

pagets