Ageing and Metabolic Bone Conditions Flashcards

1
Q

What happens to bone in osteoporosis, osteomalacia, paget’s?

A
  • osteoporosis = low bone volume
  • osteomalacia = abnormal mineralisation
  • paget’s = high bone turnover
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2
Q

In osteomalacia what are the blood results?

A
  • low calcium
  • low phosphate
  • high alkaline phosphatase
    • high PTH
  • low vitamin D
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3
Q

In Paget’s what are the blood results?

A
  • very high alkaline phosphatase
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4
Q

In renal failure what are the blood results?

A
  • low calcium
  • high phosphate
  • high alkaline phosphatase
  • high PTH
  • low vitamin D
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5
Q

In primary hyperparathyroidism what are the blood results?

A
  • high calcium
  • low phosphate
  • high alkaline phosphatase
  • high PTH
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6
Q

What is alkaline phosphatase?

A
  • produced by osteoblasts
  • marker of active osteoblasts
  • also produced by liver
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7
Q

What happens in osteoporosis?

A
  • blood results normal
  • ratio of matrix to mineral remains the same
  • only difference is reduced overall bone amount
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8
Q

What happens in osteomalacia?

A
  • low calcium and low phosphate
  • increased PTH
  • increase in AP as bone broken down
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9
Q

What happens in Paget’s?

A
  • everything normal except AP

- osteoblasts producing a lot of new bone

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10
Q

Who is at risk of getting osteoporosis?

A
  • aged 40 onwards
  • more common in women as have lower bone mass to begin with and bone loss sped up after menopause due to oestrogen loss (oestrogen inhibits RANKL)
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11
Q

How is osteoporosis diagnosed?

A
  • DEXA
  • expressed as T or Z score
  • T = no. of s.d from mean young (30 years)
  • Z = no. of s.d. from mean
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12
Q

What is osteopenia classified as?

A
  • T scores between -1 and 2.4
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13
Q

What is osteoporosis classified as?

A

T score <2.5

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14
Q

What is the mechanism of osteoporosis?

A
  • relative increase in resorption not matched by formation
  • loss unevenly distributed
  • primarily affects trabecular bone
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15
Q

Why is trabecular bone more susceptible to loss in osteoporosis?

A
  • higher turnover than cortical
  • greater SA
  • in locations that has to respond to new stresses
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16
Q

What are the primary areas impacted by osteoporosis?

A
  • vertebral bodies

- femoral neck

17
Q

What are the different possible treatments for osteoporosis?

A
  • calcium supplements
  • vitamin D
  • hormone replacement therapy
  • selective oestrogen receptor modulator (raloxifene)
  • bisphosphonates
  • teriparatide
  • denosumab
18
Q

How do calcium supplements work?

A
  • reduce negative calcium balance
19
Q

How does HRT work?

A
  • first choice in peri-menopausal women

- lasts 5 years

20
Q

How does raloxifene work?

A
  • only works on bone which is an advantage

- anti-oestrogenic for uterus and breast

21
Q

How do bisphosphonates work?

A
  • first line treatment
  • drug absorbed onto bone surface and incorporated into matrix
  • ends up precipitated onto surface
  • osteoclast clamps itself down
  • = osteoclast apoptosis
  • also signals to osteoblasts to produce new bone and decrease expression of RANKL
22
Q

What are the complications of bisphosphonates?

A
  • giant osteoclasts (accumulate)
  • osteonecrosis (dead bone)
  • atypical fractures (sub trochanteric and femoral shaft, old osteocytes signal for remodelling)
  • SO prevent by not taking for a few months
23
Q

How does teriparatide work?

A
  • recombinant PTH

- intermittent exposure increases osteoblast activity vs. osteoclast

24
Q

How does denosumab work?

A
  • monoclonal antibody
  • binds to RANKL acting as decoy receptor
  • stops RANKL signalling to osteoclasts to differentiate
  • subcutaneous injection every 6 months
  • inhibits formation of osteoclasts
25
Q

How does osteomalacia occur?

A
  • insufficient calcium and phosphate to mineralise new bone osteoid
  • = softer bones, bend/fracture more easily
  • vitamin D deficiency causes
26
Q

What does tetracycline labelling show in osteomalacia?

A
  • low bone turnover state
  • some areas no labelling
  • some diffuse labelling
  • some single line
27
Q

What is the treatment for osteomalacia?

A
  • vitamin D supplements
  • dietary (increase calcium)
  • sun/UV exposure
28
Q

What foods contain calcium?

A
  • milk, bread, beans, pulses

- dried fruit, green leafy vegetables

29
Q

Who is at risk of Paget’s disease?

A
  • mostly over 80 years
  • some 50-80
  • otherwise rare
30
Q

What are the 3 phases of Paget’s?

A

1) Initially increases rate of bone resorption (lots of giant osteoclasts)
2) compensatory phase/proliferative (increased bone formation and accelerated disorganised deposition)
3) sclerotic (woven bone not properly replaced/remodelled and irregular thickened trabeculae)

31
Q

Which bones are affected by Paget’s?

A
  • pelvis
  • femur
  • vertebra
  • skull
  • tibia
    (not symmetrical)
32
Q

What is a later complication of Paget’s?

A
  • osteosarcoma
33
Q

What is osteosarcoma?

A
  • most malignant of cancers
  • usually in long bone
  • often near knee
  • can spread rapidly
  • to prevent spread = remove affected bone part/limb amputation
34
Q

How is Paget’s treated?

A
  • bisphonate (oral 2-6 months then IV single infusion)
  • calcium and vitamin D
  • pain management
  • surgery
35
Q

What is sclerostosis?

A
  • lack of sclerostin which normally inhibits osteoblasts when osteocytes are healthy
  • autosomal recessive
  • Van Buchem syndrome
36
Q

How does sclerostosis present?

A
  • excessive height
  • resistance to fracture
  • endosteal hyperostosis