Musculo III Flashcards
(21 cards)
Osteomyelitis: definition
acute or chronic infection or inflammation of the bone marrow and/or bone
“myelo”- spinal cord or bone marrow
Osteomyelitis: cause of infection
direct from an open fraction or wound (exogenous)
seeding through blood (hematogenous)
spread from a contiguous site
vascular insufficiency (ex diabetic with cutaneous ulcers)
Osteomyelitis: manifestations of acute
dull pain at the involved site, with or without movement
tenderness, warmth, erythema, and swelling may be present at site, and fever and chills may be present
Osteomyelitis: chronic
usually secondary to an open wound
primary feature is sequestrum, an area of dead infected bone
Osteomyelitis: diagnosis and treatment
radiography, MRI, CT scanning together with a bone biopsy
tx: often surgical debridement of necrotic material
Neoplasms
most primary bone tumors are benign-most asymptomatic
osteochondroma most common benign tumor
osteoclastomas (giant cell tumor) can cause bone resorption and fractures
Osteochondroma
is a cartilage capped bone spur on the external surface of a bone
typically persists as a painless mass near a joint or on axial skeleton
Osteomyeitis: bone tumors
primary malignant tumors are rare, but one metastases are common
metastases from lung, breast, prostate cancers are especially rare-assoc with pain
osteosarcoma most common primary, malignant bone tumor-localized pain and show soft tissue mass large and tender to palpate
skeletal metastases are common
Bone growth and maintenance: growth long bones
long bones lengthen at specialized cartilaginous structures (epiphyseal growth plates)
Chondrocytes in the plates multiply, hypertrophy, and ultimately calcify
Bone growth and maintenance: maintenance
Once bones reach adult size, bone remodeling (resorption/formation) is critical for repair and maintenance
Bone growth and maintenance: bone resorption
Osteoclasts are INDIRECTLY activated by factors such as parathyroid hormone (PTH) and vitamin D
Bone growth and maintenance: bone formation
Activated osteoblasts synthesize osteoidthat includes type I collagen and calcium-binding proteins
(e.g., osteocalcin)
Osteocalcin often is used as a marker for bone resorption
Osteoporosis: definition
Metabolic disease characterized by low bone mass, microarchitectural disruption, and skeletal fragility
Osteoporosis: diagnosis T score
T-score
Standard deviation (SD) difference between a patient’s bone mineral density (BMD) and that of a young-adult reference population
T-score that is 2.5 SD or more below (i.e., -2.5) the young-adult mean BMD is defined as osteoporosis
T-score that is 1 to 2.5 SD below the young-adult mean is termed low bone mass (osteopenia)
Osteoporosis: diagnosis Z score
Comparison of the patient’s BMD to an age matched population
Z-score of -2.0 or lower is considered below the expected range for age
T-and Z-scores assessment- usually determined by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) of spine and hip
Osteoporosis: secondary causes
–Advanced age, osteoblast activity decreases
–Sedentary lifestyle, exercise strengthens bone
–Poor nutrition, low calcium decreases bone mineralization and increases PTH secretion
–Drugs, e.g., corticosteroids stimulate bone resorption
–Hyperthyroidism, thyroid hormones increase bone resorption
–Low estrogen (menopause), estrogen decreases bone resorption
Osteoporosis: treatment
General recommendations- adequate calcium, vitamin D, and exercise
Postmenopausal women:
General recommendations- Bisphosphonatesas first-line therapy
•Raloxifene(or hormone replacement therapy, HRT)
•PTH (teriparatide) for severe osteoporosis
Men:
•Similar to postmenopausal women (minus raloxifene and HRT)
•Testosteronetherapy considered for hypogonadal men
Osteomalacia: definition
Decreased mineralization of newly formed osteoid at sites of bone turnover
Characterized by a gradual softening and bending of the bones; varying severity of pain
Osteomalacia: primary causes
Insufficient calcium absorption from the intestine- low dietary calcium, a deficiency of vitamin D
Phosphate deficiency
Mineralization defects
Rickets: definition
Defective mineralization of cartilage in the epiphyseal growth plates of children
•Ossification at the epiphyseal plates is delayed and new bone is undermineralized
Paget disease
Focal disorder of bone metabolism characterized by an accelerated bone remodeling