Osteoporosis Flashcards
What is osteoporosis?
complex skeletal disease characterised by low bone density and micro-architectural defects in bone tissue, resulting in increased bone fragility and susceptibility to fracture.
What is osteopenia
Osteopenia refers to a less severe reduction in bone density than osteoporosis.
Epidemiology of osteoporosis
- Osteoporosis affects over 3.2 million people in the UK.
- Prevalence is higher in women and increases following menopause as oestrogen levels fall. Women also lose trabeculae with age.
- An ageing population is contributing to a rise in fragility fractures
- Caucasians and asians more at risk
Aetiology of osteoporosis
Primary disease (e.g. with older age)
Secondary disease, may be due to: malignancy, diabetes, Cushing, IBD, CKD, COPD, SSRis, PPIs
Pneumonic for RFs for osteoporosis
SHATTERED
SHATTERED
- Steroid use (long term corticosteroids)
- Hyperthyroidism, hyperparathyroidism, hypercalciuria
- Alcohol and tobacco use
- Thin - Low BMI (<18.5 kg/m2)
- Testosterone decrease
- Early menopause
- Renal or liver failure
- Erosive/ inflammatory bone disease e.g. myeloma or RA
- Dietary (reduced Ca2+, malabsorption, diabetes)
Other RFs for osteoporosis
- Older age
- Female (especially post-menopausal, as oestrogen is protective)
- Caucasian/ asian
- Family history
- Previous fragility fracture
- Reduced mobility and activity
Which genes are involved in getting to your peak bone mass?
Multiple genes are involved, including collagen type 1A1, vitamin D receptor and oestrogen receptor genes.
What other factors are involved in peak bone mass?
Nutritional factors, sex hormone status and physical activity also affect
peak bone mass.
Importance of Oestrogen
Oestrogen deficiency leads to an increased rate of bone loss. Oestrogen is key to the activity of bone cells with receptors found on osteoblasts, osteocytes, and osteoclasts.
osteoclasts survive longer in the absence of oestrogen, and there is arrest of osteoblastic synthetic architecture.
What do Glucocorticoids cause
increased turnover of boneand osteoporosis. Prolonged use can result in reduced turnover state - though even here synthesis is affected more leading to a loss of bone mass.
Basic pathophysiology
Osteoclast are primarily responsible for bone breakdown whilst osteoblasts are responsible for bone formation. As we age, the activity of osteoclasts increases and is not matched by osteoblasts.As such bone mass decreases.
Clinical manifestation for osteoporosis
Asymptomatic condition with the exception of fractures
Common fragility fractures include vertebral crush fracture and those of the distal wrist (Colles’ fracture) and proximal femur.
Investigations
FRAX Tool
DEXA Scan
Vertebral fracture assessment
FRAX tool
- Predicts the risk of a fragility fracture over the next 10 years. Usually the first step of assessment and is done on patients at risk of osteoporosis
- Women >65 years, men >75 years, younger patients with risk factors
involves inputting information such as their age, BMI, co-morbidities, smoking, alcohol and family history +/- bone mineral density
- Women >65 years, men >75 years, younger patients with risk factors