Osteoporosis and Osteoarthritis Flashcards

1
Q

What is Osteoporosis?

A
  • Low bone mass and microarchitectural deterioration of bone tissue
  • Inc bone fragility and susceptibility to fracture
  • Common fractures = hip, wrist, vertebral fractures
  • It is the fractures that kill people, cause disability, unable to walk independently, loose ability to carry out one independent activity of daily living
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2
Q

RF for Osteoporosis (SHATTERED)

A

SHATTERED mnemonic for RF

  • Steroid use
  • HYPERS -thyroidism, -parathyroidism -calciuria
  • Alcohol and smoking
  • Thin BMI<19
  • Testosterone dec
  • Early or untreated menopause
  • Renal or liver failure
  • Erosive/Inflammatory bone disease
  • Dietary Ca dec/malabsorption
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3
Q

How is bone strength determined?

A

Bone strength determined by:

  1. Bone minerality density (BMD)
    - peak bone mass is reached at ~30years and then declines with age.
  2. Bone size i.e. thicker and bigger bones are stronger
  3. Bone quality: bone turnover, trabecular architecture, mineralisation
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4
Q

Presentation of Osteoporosis

A
  • Asymptomatic until fracture occurs

- Back pain

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5
Q

Diagnosis of Osteoporosis

A

(1.) Bloods: FBC, U&E, CRP, Bone profile, LFT, TFT, Vitamin D

(2.) DXA and T-score
- Measures BMD
- Quantitative info and generates T-score (standard-deviation score)
- T-score:
> -1.0 = normal
-1.0 to -2.5 = osteopenia
< - 2.5 = osteoporosis

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6
Q

Treatment (Anti-resorptive and Anabolic)

and Management of Osteoporosis (4)

A

(1.) FRAX: 10-y probability of fragility fracture >40y. Determine whether to treat pharmacologically

(2. ) Anti-resorptive: Dec osteoclast activity and bone turnover
(a. ) Bisphosphonates (1st line) [alendronate, risedronate, ibandronate, alendronic acid]
(b. ) HRT for early menopausal women
(c. ) Denosumab: Mabs that switch off bone reabsorb

(3. ) Anabolic: Inc osteoblast activity & bone formation
- Teriparatide

(4. ) Lifestyle measures
- Prophylaxis if osteopenia: Ca and Vit D supps
- Ca and Vit D rich diet
- Quit smoking and reduce alcohol consumption
- Weight bearing exercise may increase bone mineral density

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7
Q

Causes of Osteoporosis (7).

A

(1.) Inflammatory disease: RA, seronegative arthritis, CTD, IBD

(2. ) Endocrine disease
- TH = inc metabolic rate of body & bone, PTH = drive bone resorption to inc Ca
- Cushing Syndrome: inc cortisol inc bone resorption, osteoblast apoptosis
- Oestrogen/Testosterone control bone turnover e.g. early menopause, male hypogonadism

(3. ) Reduced skeletal loading inc resorption
- Low body weight, BMI

(4. ) Immobility
(5. ) Medications e.g. Glucocorticoids
(6. ) Reduced Ca, Vit D = Hypocalcaemia, Vit D deficiency

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8
Q

How does early or untreated menopause in risk of osteoporosis

A
  1. There is the loss of restraining effect of oestrogen on bone turnover.
  2. So, there is a high bone turnover: resorption rate>formation
  3. Net effect of is bone loss, trabeculae loss and ultimately microarchitectural disruption
  4. This is preventable by oestrogen replacement
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9
Q

What is Osteoarthritis?

A
  • Slow onset, joint pain causes by progressive loss of articular cartilage, remodelling of adjacent bone structures and inflammation
  • Synovial joint affected: knees, hips, small joints of hand
  • Comprises of: synovitis, fibrillations (cracks in the cartilage) osteophytes (Herberden, bouchard nodes)
  • Causes functional limitation and reduced QoL
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10
Q

RF of OA (6)

A
  1. Age >65y
  2. Female: menopause
  3. Obesity: Fat tissue is pro-inflammatory & weight-bearing on joints
  4. Joint injury/trauma/overuse/stress - occupational + recreational:
    - Manual labour = OA of small joints in hand
    - Farming = OA of hip
    - Football = OA of knee
  5. RA + Others: neurological disorders, genetics, medication
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11
Q

Sx and signs of Osteoarthritis

A

(1. ) Joint pain is exacerbated by exercise and relieved by rest
(2. ) Joint warmth and/or tenderness suggesting synovitis
(3. ) Crepitus - grinding, cracking sensation when moving it common in OA knee flex

(4. ) Bony swelling and deformity (severe case)
- due to osteophytes, swelling at distal (Heberden’s) or proximal IP joints (Bouchard’s). –> Remember BP petrol and HD tele.

(5. ) Absence of systemic symptoms!
- DDx: In RA, painful swelling + systemic Sx of fever, rash would be seen

Important to consider:

  • Is there reduced range of joint movement
  • Functional impairment? Walking, activities of daily living?
  • Pt may demonstrate loss of independence in OA
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12
Q

Dx of Osteoarthritis (w/o Ix)

A

Dx of OA can be made clinically without Ix if:

  • aged >45y; and
  • Has activity related joint pain; and
  • No morning joint stiffness or lasts <30mins
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13
Q

Ix of Osteoarthritis

A

(1.) Bloods: FBC, creatinine, LFTs (checked before NSAID use)

(2. ) Plain film Xray (not routine) concs
- Important radiological features in advanced OA:
(a. ) Osteophytes formation
(b. ) joint space Narrowing
(c. ) bone Cysts
(d. ) subarticular Sclerosis.
(e. ) abnormal bone Contour

(3.) Joint aspiration - consider if joint swollen to exclude septic arthritis, gout

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14
Q

Tx and Mx of Osteoarthritis

A

Conservative/Non-medical

(1. ) Pt education
(2. ) Exercise: muscle strengthening exercises, aerobic exercise
(3. ) Weight loss
(4. ) Aids and devices e.g. Footwear, Orthoses, Walking aids
(5. ) Physiotherapy, Occupational therapy

Medical

(1. ) Topical paracetamol, capsaicin or NSAIDs considered before oral
(2. ) Intra-articular corticosteroid injections (Hyaluronic acid) - If moderate-severe pain
(3. ) Transdermal patches

Surgery

(1. ) Arthroplasty/joint replacement indicated:
- Uncontrolled pain (at night too)
- Limitation of function
- Age is a consideration
(2. ) Fusion
- Usually ankle and foot, this sacrifices movement for pain relief

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