Calcium and phosphate metabolism Flashcards

1
Q

Bone turnover serves homeostasis of serum calcium and phosphate, in conjunction with

A

Bone turnover serves homeostasis of serum calcium and phosphate, in conjunction with

Parathyroid hormone (PTH)
Vitamin D (1,25-dihydroxy D3)
Calcitonin
FGF-23

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2
Q

Clinical features of hypercalcemia

A

Depression, fatigue, anorexia, nausea, vomiting,
Abdominal pain, constipation
Renal calcification (kidney stones)
Bone pain
“painful bones, renal stones, abdominal groans, and psychic moans,”

Severe: cardiac arrhythmias, cardiac arrest

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3
Q

Causes of hypercalcaemia

A

Most common causes:
In ambulatory patients: primary hyperparathyroidism
In hospitalized patients: malignancy

Less common causes include:
Hyperthyroidism
Excessive intake of vitamin D

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4
Q

Serum biochemistry - hypercalcaemia

A

Serum calcium - modest to marked increase
Serum phosphate - low or low normal
Serum alkaline phosphatase raised in ~ 20% of cases
Serum creatinine may be elevated in long standing disease (kidney damage)
Serum PTH concentration should be interpreted in relation to calcium

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5
Q

Most common cause of hypercalcaemia in hospitalized patients

A

Most common cause of hypercalcaemia in hospitalized patients
Humoral, e.g., lung carcinoma secreting PTHrP
Metastatic

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6
Q

Causes of hypocalcaemia

A
Most common causes:
Vitamin D deficiency
Renal failure 
Less common causes include:
Hypoparathyroidism
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7
Q

Rickets and osteomalacia - define both

A

Bone disease associated with vitamin D deficiency

Rickets - in children, failure of bone mineralisation and disordered cartilage formation

Osteomalacia - in adults, impaired bone mineralisation

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8
Q

Features of osteomalacia

A

Diffuse bone pain
Waddling gait, muscle weakness
On X-ray, stress fractures

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9
Q

Serum biochemistry - osteomalacia

A
Serum biochemistry:
Low/normal calcium
Hypophosphataemia
Raised alkaline phosphatase
Secondary hyperparathyroidism
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10
Q

Osteoporosis - define

A
Osteoporosis: loss of bone mass
Endocrine 
Malignancy 
Drug-induced
Renal disease
Nutritional
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11
Q

Diagnosis of osteoporosis

A

Measurement of bone mineral density (BMD)

Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA or DXA scan)

T score
Number of SDs below average for young adult at peak bone density

Z score
Matched to age and/or group

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12
Q

Endocrine causes of osteoporosis

A

Hypogonadism – notably any cause of oestrogen deficiency
Excess glucocorticoids – endogenous or exogenous
Hyperparathyroidism
Hyperthyroidism

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13
Q

Source of oestrogen

A

Growing follicles are the source of oestrogen. No more follicles, no more oestrogens.

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14
Q

Treatments for osteoporosis

A

Postmenopausal: HRT – effects well established but safety of long term treatment has been questioned
Bisphosphonates – inhibit function of osteoclasts: risedronate, alendronate
PTH analogues
Denosumab – antibody against RANK ligand
Ensure adequate calcium and vit D intake, appropriate exercise

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15
Q

Guidelines for HRT

A

Short-term therapy (3-5 years) for treating vasomotor symptoms
Lowest effective dose to be used
Long term use not recommended

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16
Q

Osteoporosis - characteristics

A

Loss of bone density
Increased fracture risk
Increase in bone resorption over formation

17
Q

Induction of osteoclast differentiation by RANK ligand

A

RANK (receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B): surface receptor on pre-osteoclasts, stimulates osteoclast differentiation

RANK-ligand: produced by pre-osteoblasts, osteoblasts and osteocytes; binds to RANK and stimulates osteoclast differentiation

OPG (osteoprotogerin): decoy receptor produced by osteocytes; binds to RANK-L, preventing activation of RANK

18
Q

Wnt pathway function

A

In adult animals wnt is involved in growth, differentiation and maintenance of many tissues, including bone. Wnt signalling is under negative control by various proteins.