Pathoma: Skeletal System Flashcards
What causes achondroplasia?
An activating mutation in FGFR3
The activating mutation turns off cartilage growth in growth plates.
Why does achondroplasia only affect the long bones?
Bone grows by two mechanisms: intramembranous growth (hand bones, ribs) and endochondral bone growth (long bones). Achondroplasia disrupts the cartilage growth that is necessary for endochondral bone growth.
Describe osteogenesis imperfecta.
An autosomal dominant defect in type I collagen synthesis
Remember that bONE is type ONE collagen.
Why does the sclera appear blue in OI?
The choroidal veins are exposed.
_______________ results from a defect in bone resorption.
Osteopetrosis
The most common defect that leads to osteopetrosis is _______________.
lack of carbonic anhydrase II; without this enzymes, osteoclasts are unable to create the acidic environment that dissolves calcium from bone
Side note: the reason alkaline phosphatase is involved in bone growth is that it makes an ALKALINE environment that allows for calcium to deposit in bone.
What signs and symptoms are typical of osteopetrosis?
- Anemia
- Fractures
- Thrombocytopenia
- X-rays showing complete whiteout of bone
- Hydrocephalus (from occlusion of the foramen magnum)
The hematologic abnormalities arise from the sclerotic bone growing into the medulla.
Describe why defective carbonic anhydrase (as seen in osteopetrosis) causes renal tubular acidosis.
The tubular cells convert H2O and CO2 to HCO3 and H+ using carbonic anhydrase. The proton is excreted when it binds NH3 in the nephron and be excreted, while the HCO3 is resorbed.
Without carbonic anhydrase, that net absorption of HCO3 does not occur and metabolic acidosis develops.
What can treat osteopetrosis?
Bone marrow transplant
BMT will give new monocytes to the patient which will properly dissolve bone.
Osteomalacia results in defective _________________.
mineralization of osteoid
What is rachitic rosary?
Rickets often presents with bumps along the sternum that resemble a rosary.
What labs are suggestive of osteomalacia?
- Low vitamin D
- Low calcium
- High PTH (because of the low calcium)
- High alkaline phosphatase (because bone is trying to be formed but is not being adequately mineralized)
True or false: osteoporosis presents with the same pattern of labs as osteomalacia.
False!
Osteoporosis results from the loss of bone density that is characteristic of aging –not from serum abnormalities.
Osteoporosis typically presents with pain in _______________.
weight-bearing bones (like the long bones of the leg and the vertebrae)
What causes the aberrant activation of osteoclasts seen in Paget’s disease of the bone?
The etiology is debated, but it’s thought that it might arise from viruses from dogs.