Bone Disorders Flashcards
1
Q
Bone disorders
A
Imbalances between bone deposition and bone resorption underlie nearly every disease that affects the human skeleton
3 major types:
- osteomalacia and rickets
- osteoporosis
- paget’s disease
1
Q
Osteomalacia
A
- bones are poorly mineralized
- osteoid is secreted, but calcium salts are not adequately deposited
- result: soft/weak bones + pain with weight bearing
2
Q
Rickets
A
- osteomalacia in children
- cause: deficiency in Vitamin D or insufficient dietary calcium
- Result: bowed legs or other bone deformities
3
Q
Osteoporosis
A
- groups of diseases when bone resorption > bone deposit (bones breakdown faster than they build up)
- bone matrix remains normal, but bone mass declines
- bones become porous and light - very likely to fracture under minimal stresses (holes within bone)
- bones most susceptible to fracture are the neck of the femur and the vertebrae (high weight bearing stress)
4
Q
Kyphoplasty
A
- kyphosis: hunchback that develops in elderly
- vertebrae become brittle (more likely to fracture) so common activities can cause them to fracture
- inject bone matrix in bone to cover up cracks to heal
5
Q
Risk factors for osteoporosis
A
- older post menopausal women are most affected (decrease in estrogen which stimulates bone growth)
- men are less affected bc testosterone plays a protective role
Additional risk factors: - insufficient excercise
- Diet poor in calcium + protein
- smoking and alcohol use
- genetics
- hormone-related conditions
- hyperthyroidism
- diabetes mellitus
- use of certain medications-especially steroids
6
Q
Treating osteoporosis
A
- calcium and vitamin d supplements
- regular weight bearing exercise
- hormone replacement therapy-can slow bone loss but can increase of heart attack, stroke, and cancer
7
Q
Prevention Techniques for osteoporosis
A
- plenty of dietary calcium in early adulthood
- reduced consumption of carbonates beverages and alcohol
- plenty of weight bearing exercise
8
Q
Paget’s disease
A
- excessive or haphazard bone deposit and resorption; causes bone to grow quickly and poorly
- high ratio of spongy to compact bone with reduced mineralization
- typically occurs in spine, pelvis, femur, or skull
- rarely occurs before age 40
- affects about 3% of elderly people in North America
- cause is unknown-possibly triggered by a viral infection
- treatment: biphosphates and calcitonin (which beings down calcium levels)
9
Q
Developmental Timeline of Bone
A
- children/adolescents: bone formation exceeds resorption; males tend to have greater overall bone mass
- young adults: bone formation = bone resorption
- adults: bone resorption exceeds formation
Changes in bone density are largely determined by genetics-a single gene that codes for Vitamin D’s cellular docking site - beginning in the 4th decade of life, bone mass, bone mineralization, and bone’s ability to repair decreases
10
Q
Developmental Aspects of bone
A
- embryonic skeleton ossifies predictably so fetal age can be easily determined on x-ray / sonogram
- most long bones being ossifying by 8 weeks - primary ossification centers are well developed by 12 weeks
- at birth, most long bones are well ossified - except the epiphyses (bones still need growth)
- epiphyseal plates persist through childhood and adolescence
- by age ~25, all bones are completely ossified and skeletal growth ceases