01-31 Metabolic Bone Dz Flashcards
1. To define terms used to describe bone disorders: —osteopenia —osteoporosis —osteomalacia 2. To understand the pathologic and pathophysiologic processes that underlie these bone disorders.
Define osteopenia
radiologic dx
—”low bone mass”
—two subcategories: osteo-malacia & -porosis
confusingly, also used to denote mild osteoporosis more particularly on Dexa scan read-out, so pay attn to context
Define osteomalacia
—histo apperance
—clinical complaints/presentation
a pathological dx
—decrease in bone (osteopenia) due only to decreased mineralization; matrix is NOT decreased
—In kids: “rickets” = above + epiphyseal collagen troubles
HISTO
—see lots of osteoid (unmineralized bone; stains orange) that is thicker than usual
—same # of trabeculae as nl bone
PRESENTATION
—skeletal pain/tenderness/fxs diffusely w/o loss of skeletal mass
—prox muscle weak
—”Looser’s zones” = pseudofractures on x-ray
Define osteoporosis
a pathological dx
—both a decr in matrix and mineralization that puts pt at increased r/o fx (esp hip, spine and distal wrist)
—both cortical and medullary bone become thinner w/ loss of trabeculae in the medulla
—dx of exclusion (i.e. you’ve ruled out osteomalacia)
what lineage do osteoclasts come from?
—how are they activated?
osteoclasts come from the monocyte/M0 line
—activated by:
1. cytokines (IL-1, TNF, PTH, 1,25-D3) signal osteoBLastic precursor cells
2. osteoBLastic precursor cells use cytokines (IL-6 & IL-11) to signal osteoCLasts to differentiate from their precursors
describe the histo appearance of osteoclasts vs. blasts
large mulitnucleated cells will resorption lacunae right up against bone
—vs. osteoblasts are smaller and applied closely to osteoid
Mineralization is an ____ process.
passive
—only need to have Ca++ and PO4- around at the correct pH to make it happen
Differentiating between osteoporosis and osteomalacia. Order some labs
—serum [Ca], [PO4], [25OH-VitD] and [PTH]
—BUN/Cr
—LFTs
—CBC (marrow issue?)
—SPEP (MM?)
—Alk phosphatase (signal of osteoBLast activity)
Interpreting Dexa Scans —"Dexa" means? —Z-score? —T-score? —Cut-off for osteopenia? —For osteoporosis?
—Dexa = dual xray absorptiometry —Z-score = # of S.D.'s pt is away from mean for their age and sex —T-score = # of S.D.'s pt is away from mean for a 30y/o of their sex (everyone eventually fits dx) —osteopenia = T -1.0 to -2.5 —osteoporosis = T < -2.5
Who should get a Dexa?
—post-menopausal ♀ or anyone else w/ estrogen def or other clinical r/o osteoporosis
—vertebral anomalies on xray
—pts w/ high-dose, long-term glucocorticoids Rx
—1°hyperparathyroidism
—metab dz that affects skeleton (e.g. chronic renal, GI, or liver dz)
—pts being tx’d for osteoporosis who need monitoring
How does the risk of fracture increase w/ T-score?
—pretty much incrementally
—no “fracture threshold” per se
review slides 23 & 25 which says
most women w/ fxs are actually osteopenic (probably b/c there are more women alive who are osteopenic > osteoporotic)
—point is that BMD is not the only factor at play
SLIDE 25
—Age has a huge risk, people with same BMD but increased age have much higher r/o fx
What factors (besides low T-score) influence the fracture rate? —Why is this?
—age
—previous h/o fx
—self-rated poor health
—poor mobility
This is because…
—bone density decr w/ age
—older bone is weaker even at same BMD (i.e. strength depends on more than BMD)
—elderly are more susceptible to falls due to decr muscle tone, peripheral neuropathy, poor vision, etc.
Review slide 32
—Working backwards from osteomalacia’s final path, what are the possible etiologies of osteomalacia?
FINAL PATH
—inadequate Ca2+ or PO4 or abnl pH
RENAL
—abnl pH reg → hypophosphatemia
—renal dz → incr urinary Ca and/or PO4 loss
GI
—decreased GI Ca and/or PO4 absorption (usu 2°Vit D abnl’ty caused renal, GI, or liver dz; nutritional def, drugs)
What are the ways in which glucocorticoids mess w/ bone and mineral homeostasis?
- reduce GI Ca absorption
- suppress bone formation
- impair renal Ca reabsorption
- 2° incr in PTH
- suppress gonads
What are biomarkers for:
—osteoclast activity?
—osteoblast activity?
OSTEOCLAST
—urinary N-telopeptide (type I collagen break down product)
OSTEOBLAST
—serum alkaline phosphatase
—serum osteocalcin