Skeleton and Metabolism (MS system) Flashcards
1
Q
Functions of bone
A
- Structure: give structure and shape to body
- Mechanical: sites for muscle attachment
- Protective: vital organs and bone marrow
- Metabolic: reserve of calcium and other minerals
2
Q
What is bone?
A
Inorganic 65%:
- calcium hydroxyapatite (Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2)
- storehouse for 99% of calcium in body
- 85% of phosphorus, 65% sodium, magnesium
Organic 35%:
- bone cells and protein matrix
3
Q
Endocrine regulation of bone
A
- Parathyroid hormone
- Thyroid hormone
- Growth hormone
- Insulin like growth factor
- Oestrogen
4
Q
Calcium homeostasis
A
- from the GI tract to soft tissue and kidney and to bones and reverse
- GI tract has calcium intake of approx 1g/day
- kidney has calcium excretion into urine and is moderated by reabsorption
- bone is reservoir to maintain homeostasis
5
Q
Parathyroid hormone (PTH)
A
- low calcium stimulates PTH release
- PTH stimulates resorption via RANKL/OPG
- PTH also stimulates osteoblast differentiation
- intermittent PTH treatment is anabolic
- continuous PTH treatment is catabolic
- PTH causes Ca2+ from bone to be released into bloodstream
- active vitamin D3 production
- high calcium and D3 inhibit PTH production
6
Q
Calcium homeostasis summary
A
- low serum calcium stimulates PTH production in parathyroid glands
- PTH acts to increase serum calcium concentration by:
- increase bone resorption
- increase calcium reabsorption in kidneys
- stimulates active vitamin D3 production, increasing calcium absorption in gut
- high serum calcium and active vitamin D3 inhibit PTH production
7
Q
Osteocytes
A
- osteocytes are endocrine cells
- embedded in lacunae in mature bone
- connected via processes through. canalicular channels
- form a mechanosensory network throughout bone
- they communicate with systemic circulation as well as bone cells
- high serum phosphate stimulates FGF23 syntheses in osteocytes
8
Q
FGF23
A
- Fibroblast Growth Factor
- In 2000, activating mutations in GFG23 were identified in patients with autosomal dominant hypophosphatemic rickets
- acts to increase phosphate excretion in kidney
- FGF23 actions to reduce serum phosphate:
- decreases phosphate reabsorption in kidneys
- inhibits PTH production (decrease release of phosphate via bone resorption)
- inhibits active vitamin D3 production (decrease phosphate absorption in gut)
9
Q
What is a metabolic bone disease?
A
- a group of diseases that cause reduced bone mass and reduced bone strength
- due to imbalance of various chemicals in the body (vitamins, minerals, hormones, etc)
- causes altered bone cell activity, rate of mineralisation or changes in bone structure
- eg of disease is osteoporosis
10
Q
Rickets/ Osteomalacia
A
- defective mineralisation of normally synthesised bone matrix
- rickets in children
- effectively two types:
1) deficiency of vitamin D3 (causing hypocalcemia)
2) deficiency of phosphate - oncogenic osteomalacia (mesenchymal tumours producing excess FGF23)
normal bone:
- mostly mature mineralised bone, little unmineralised osteoid
osteomalacia:
- little mature mineralised bone, mostly unmineralised osteoid
outcomes:
- bone pain/tenderness
- fracture
- proximal weakness
- bone deformity
11
Q
Hyperparathyroidism
A
Excess PTH:
- hypercalcemia
- hypophosphatemia
Primary:
- parathyroid adenoma (85-90%)
- chief cell hyperplasia
Secondary:
- chronic renal deficiency
- vit D deficiency
- Osteiris fibrosa cystica
12
Q
Hyperparathyroidsm (Mnemonic)
A
- stones (kidney stones)
- bones (pain from osteitis fibrosa cystica and excess bone resorption)
- abdominal moans (acute pancreatitis)
- psychic groans (psychosis and depression)