Osteomalacia Flashcards
What is osteomalacia?
The softening of the bones is generally secondary to vitamin D deficiencies leading to incomplete mineralisation of the bone
What is rickets?
In growing children, rickets is characterised by defective mineralisation of the growth plate cartilage leading to skeletal deformities and reduction of growth secondary to vitamin D deficiency and subsequent incomplete bone mineralisation
What is the epidemiology?
Vitamin D deficiency is common in both children and adults
The peak incidence of osteomalacia is 50-60 years
Males and females are equally affected
What are the risk factors for osteomalacia?
Dark skin, especially in South Asian, African-Caribbean, and Middle-Eastern people
Vitamin D deficiency is as high as 94% in otherwise healthy South Asian adults
Family history of vitamin D deficiency
Age >65
Pregnancy
Obesity
Covering of the face and body
Housebound/institutionalised patients
Poverty
Vegetarianism
Alcoholism
Living in a high altitude
Which organ produces vitamin D?
the skin (in response to UV radiation)
What molecule does the skin use to produce vitamin D?
cholesterol
What organ converts vitamin D into its active form?
kidneys
Why does chronic kidney disease increase risk of vitamin D deficiency?
the kidneys activate vitamin D into its active form
Give a GI risk factor for vitamin D deficiency:
malabsorption disorders e.g. IBD (not enough vitamin D is absorbed)
What is the role of vitamin D in bone mineralisation? (2)
1) vitamin D is essential for calcium and phosphate absorption in the intestines, reabsorption in the kidneys and for regulating bone turning over (promoting bone reabsorption to increase serum calcium)
2) calcium and phosphate are required for bone construction
Describe how a secondary hyperparathyroidism can impair bone mineralisation?
the low serum calcium as a result of low vitamin D increase parathyroid hormone which promotes calcium reabsorption from the bones
Give 6 presentations associated with osteomalacia:
1) fatigue
2) bone pain
3) muscle weakness
4) muscle aches
5) pathological/ abnormal fractures
6) looser zones
What are ‘looser zones’?
Fragility fractures that go partially through bone
What are the signs of osteomalacia on examination?
- Proximal muscle weakness
- Muscle wasting associated with proximal muscle weakness
- Waddling gait if the bone pain/ proximal muscle weakness is severe
What are 2 differential diagnoses for osteomalacia?
- Osteoporosis
- Paget’s disease of the bone