Osteomalacia Flashcards
What is osteomalacia?
Poor bone mineralisation leading to soft bone due to lack of vitamin D
Give 3 symptoms of osteomlacia.
- Bone pain and tenderness.
- Fractures.
- Wadding gait.
An elderly lady with bone pain is found to have hypocalcaemia, hypophosphataemia and a raised ALP. What is the most likely diagnosis?
Osteomalacia.
Why is osteomalacia less common in the UK than it once was?
Used to be common because we have little sunlight in the UK
Now foods are fortified with vitamin D.
Give 3 risk factors for osteomalacia.
- Lack of exposure to sunlight e.g. indoors, lots of clothing
- Darker skin
- Malabsorption disorders e.g. IBD
- Low dietary vitamin D e.g. vegan
- Kidney disease - CKD (they activate vitamin D)
In the skin, ________ (made from ________) is metabolised to vit D3, in the presence of _______.
previt D3
cholesterol
UVB
Vitamin D is important for bones because ________.
It is needed for the absorption of calcium and phosphate from the GI tract
In the ________, vitamin D3 is metabolised to _________.
Liver
Calcidiol/25-hydroxyvitamin D
In the _______, _________ is metabolised to __________ (calcitriol).
Kidney
25 hydroxyvitamin D
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D
How does the body respond to low vitamin D?
There will be low calcium and phosphate (because vitamin D is needed to absorb them).
So, PTH is released.
PTH mobilises calcium from bones
= bone weakness –> osteomalacia.
What is Rickets?
Osteomalacia in children, before the growth plates have fused
Give 4 signs + symptoms of osteomalacia.
- Fatigue, bone pain (esp. hip/rib/pelvis/thigh/foot) and tenderness.
- Dull ache that is worse on weight-bearing exercises
- Fractures – esp NOF, abnormal fractures
- Muscle weakness/aches - waddling gait, difficulty with stairs
Give 4 signs + symptoms of Rickets.
- Growth retardation, hypotonia
- Knock knees, bowed legs
- Widened epiphyses at the wrists
- Hypocalcaemic tetany (intermittent muscular spasms) may occur in
severe cases
Bow legs = varus
Knock knees = valgus
Outline the investigations for osteomalacia.
- Blood:
* Low Ca2+ and phosphate
* Raised serum alkaline phosphatase
* Elevated parathyroid hormone
* Low 25-hydroxy vitamin D - Biopsy:
* Shows incomplete mineralisation
* GOLD STANDARD TEST but not practical - X-ray:
* Shows defective mineralisation
* Looser’s pseudofractures/zones - low-density bands extending from the
cortex inwards in the shafts of the long bones e.g femur and pelvis
What is the first line investigation for osteomalacia?
Serum 25-hydroxy vitamin D
- Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D ( less than 25 nmol/L is Vit D deficiency, 25-50 nmol/L is vit D insufficiency, greater than 75 nmol/L is optimal.