Osteomalacia Flashcards

1
Q

What is osteomalacia?

A

Poor bone mineralisation leading to soft bone due to lack of vitamin D

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2
Q

Give 3 symptoms of osteomlacia.

A
  1. Bone pain and tenderness.
  2. Fractures.
  3. Wadding gait.
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3
Q

An elderly lady with bone pain is found to have hypocalcaemia, hypophosphataemia and a raised ALP. What is the most likely diagnosis?

A

Osteomalacia.

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4
Q

Why is osteomalacia less common in the UK than it once was?

A

Used to be common because we have little sunlight in the UK
Now foods are fortified with vitamin D.

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5
Q

Give 3 risk factors for osteomalacia.

A
  1. Lack of exposure to sunlight e.g. indoors, lots of clothing
  2. Darker skin
  3. Malabsorption disorders e.g. IBD
  4. Low dietary vitamin D e.g. vegan
  5. Kidney disease - CKD (they activate vitamin D)
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6
Q

In the skin, ________ (made from ________) is metabolised to vit D3, in the presence of _______.

A

previt D3
cholesterol
UVB

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7
Q

Vitamin D is important for bones because ________.

A

It is needed for the absorption of calcium and phosphate from the GI tract

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8
Q

In the ________, vitamin D3 is metabolised to _________.

A

Liver
Calcidiol/25-hydroxyvitamin D

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9
Q

In the _______, _________ is metabolised to __________ (calcitriol).

A

Kidney
25 hydroxyvitamin D
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D

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10
Q

How does the body respond to low vitamin D?

A

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.

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11
Q

What is Rickets?

A

Osteomalacia in children, before the growth plates have fused

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12
Q

Give 4 signs + symptoms of osteomalacia.

A
  1. Fatigue, bone pain (esp. hip/rib/pelvis/thigh/foot) and tenderness.
  2. Dull ache that is worse on weight-bearing exercises
  3. Fractures – esp NOF, abnormal fractures
  4. Muscle weakness/aches - waddling gait, difficulty with stairs
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13
Q

Give 4 signs + symptoms of Rickets.

A
  1. Growth retardation, hypotonia
  2. Knock knees, bowed legs
  3. Widened epiphyses at the wrists
  4. Hypocalcaemic tetany (intermittent muscular spasms) may occur in
    severe cases

Bow legs = varus
Knock knees = valgus

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14
Q

Outline the investigations for osteomalacia.

A
  1. Blood:
    * Low Ca2+ and phosphate
    * Raised serum alkaline phosphatase
    * Elevated parathyroid hormone
    * Low 25-hydroxy vitamin D
  2. Biopsy:
    * Shows incomplete mineralisation
    * GOLD STANDARD TEST but not practical
  3. 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
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15
Q

What is the first line investigation for osteomalacia?

A

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.
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16
Q

What is the gold standard test for osteomalacia?

A

Iliac bone biopsy with double tetracycline labelling

17
Q

In osteomalacia, ALP will be ..

A

High

18
Q

What is the supplementary vitamin D (that you would give for osteomalacia) called?

A

Cholecalciferol