Bone Flashcards

1
Q

Important markers of bone formation

A

Procollagen peptide, osteocalcin, total and bone alkaline phophatase

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2
Q

Important urine and serum markers of bone resorption

A
  • Urine: (test second morning void; poorly correlate with BMD, but changes indicate response to Tx)
    •Calcium
    •Hydroxyproline
    •Pyridinoline
    •Deoxypyridinoline cross links of collagen
    •N-telopeptides
  • Serum: C-telopeptides
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3
Q

Regulators of osteoblast activity

A

Estrogen, Vit D

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4
Q

Estrogen effect on bone density

A

Improves bone density by regulating osteoclastic/osteoblastic activity

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5
Q

Vitamin D effect on bone density

A

Increased intake mediated by calcium in kidneys -> increased vitamin D receptors in osteoblasts

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6
Q

Exogenous factors that directly stimulate osteoblast activity

A

Forteo (rPTH), Fluoride

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7
Q

Osteoporosis risk factors

A

Age, personal hx of fracture, Caucasian, smoker, estrogen def, alcoholism, steroids, low BMI, RA

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8
Q

Osteoporosis fracture risk reduction

A

o Weight bearing exercise/fall prevention
o Calc (1000-1300 mg/d), Vit D (600-800 IU/d)
o Reduce alcohol/stop smoking

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9
Q

Osteoporosis screening

A

65, meno w/ RF, or FRAX >9.3% for major fx
o DEXA q15 for normal BMD or mild bone loss (T > -1.5)
o DEXA q5 for T-score between -1.5 and -1.99
o DEXA q1 for T-score between -2.0 and -2.49

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10
Q

Who to treat for osteoporosis

A

Z-score = reference pop same age, sex, race
T-score = SD from mean peak BMD normal 30-year-old adult
- T-score ≤ -2.5 (osteoporosis)
- T -1 to -2.5 (osteopenia) w/ FRAX >20% or hip >3%
History of low trauma fracture (i.e. vertebrae/hip)

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11
Q

Labs to obtain prior to osteoporosis treatment

A

CBC, BMP, Vit D, 24hr urine calc, TSH/FT4, PTH

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12
Q

Treatments for osteoporosis (5)

A

Bisphophonates, raloxifene, Denosumab, Calcitonin, recombinant PTH

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13
Q

Bisphosphonate MOA, instructions, contraindications

A

Inhibit osteoclasts; correct hypo-Ca
• PO: empty stomach/upright x 30min, also IV qYear;
• Contraindicated GERD, CKD; rare osteonecrosis of jaw

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14
Q

Raloxifene MOA, target population

A

(SERM): Anti-resorptive
• Reduce vertebral fracture
• Risk VTE better suited for young post-menopausal b/c also decreases breast cancer

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15
Q

Denosumab MOA, admin, contraindication

A

Anti-resorptive
• SQ inj q6mo
• Contraindication: hypocalcemia

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16
Q

Calcitonin MOA, admin, target population

A

Anti-resorptive;
• Nasal spray or SQ;
• Less robust reduction in fx; not for women w/i 5yr meno

17
Q

Recombinant PTH MOA, admin

A

Anabolic (stimulates osteoblasts)
• Teriparatide (Forteo) - SQ inj qDay; restricted to 2yr - risk of osteosarcoma;
• BMD lost quickly after d/c -> add anti-resorp after d/c

18
Q

Osteoporosis tx surveillance

A

Repeat DEXA 2 years after starting treatment
• DEXA not helpful at less than 1 year intervals.
• Telopeptides are helpful at assessing compliance with therapy.
• At 3 months, a decrease of at least 50% in either N-telo-peptide (urinary) or C-telo-peptide (serum) are signs of response to bisphosphanate therapy.
If BMD improved/stable, rpt DEXA w/ new risk factors

19
Q

Tamoxifen vs Raloxifene

A

o Both: Lower cholesterol, increase VTE risk, vasomotor sx, reduce breast cancer (T-50%, R-60%)
o Tamoxifen: Endometrial thickening/cancer risk (2.5x), vag estrogenization, decrease BMD; 10yr max
o Raloxifene: Increase BMD, no duration limit

20
Q

Other causes of low BMD

A

Hyperparathyroidism, multiple myeloma, hyperthyroidism, renal failure

21
Q

Hyperparathyroidism mechanism of decreased BMD

A

PTH increased in response to low serum calcium concentrations in an attempt to mobilize calcium from kidney and bone and to increase 1,25 dihydroxy vit D production
PTH release raises calcium concentration toward normal by:
• Decreased urinary calcium excretion due to stimulation of calcium reabsorption in the distal tubule
• Increased intestinal calcium absorption mediated by increased renal production of calcitriol
• Increased bone resorption