In the name of God - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 46
About This Presentation
Title:

In the name of God

Description:

In the name of God – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:62
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 47
Provided by: K1198
Category:
Tags: disease | fish | god | name | pathology

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: In the name of God


1
In the name of God
In the name of God
2
Osteomalacia
  • Mohsen Mardani-Kivi
  • Assistant Professor, Orthopedic Department,
    Guilan University of Medical Sciences

3
Case
  • 33 year old Asian lady
  • Presents with 3 /12 months history of generalised
    bony pain
  • PMH ?depression
  • D/Hx ?sertraline
  • P/Ex ? generalised bony tenderness
  • Joints ? normal ROM, no inflammation

4
Investigations
  • Hb 12.9 (11.5-16.5) Calcium 2.18 (2.2-2.6)
  • WBC 4.7 (4.9-11.0) Phosphate 0.79 (0.85-1.45)
  • Plt 253 (150-400) Albumin 39 (35-50)
  • ESR 12 Alk Phos 172 (25-96)
  • Clotting Normal Total protein 72 (60-80)
  • Urea 4.2 (3.0-6.5) LFTs normal
  • Creat 85 (35-120)

5
  • Diagnosis?

THINK
6
(No Transcript)
7
Definition
  • Osteomalacia is the general term for the
    softening of the bones due to defective bone
    mineralization.

8
Definition
  • Osteomalacia in children is known as rickets, and
    because of this, it is often restricted to the
    milder, adult form of the disease.
  • It may show signs as diffuse body pains, muscle
    weakness, and fragility of the bones.

9
General characteristics
  • Osteomalacia is derived from Greek
  • osteo ?bone
  • malacia ?softness
  • most commonly found in
  • dark-skinned
  • diet-disbalanced subjects (mainly lactating
    females).
  • Age adults
  • Site WEIGHT-BEARING BONES such as vertebral
    bodies and femoral neck

10
General characteristics
11
Physiology
  • Normal bone metabolism CA
  • CALCIUM ? 99 in bone.
  • Main functions ?muscle /nerve function, clotting.
  • Plasma calcium? 50 free, 50 bound to albumin.
  • Dietary needs
  • Kids 600mg/day
  • Adolescent 1300mg/day,
  • Adult 750mg/day
  • Pregnancy 1500mg/day,
  • Breastfeeding 2g/day,
  • Fractures 1500mg/day
  • Absorbed in duodenum (active transport) and
    jejunum (diffusion), 98 reabsorbed in kidney
    prox. tubule, may be excreted in stool.

12
Physiology
  • Normal bone metabolism PHOSPHATE
  • PHOSPHATE ? 85 in bone.
  • Functions metabolite and buffer in enzyme
    systems.
  • Plasma phosphate mainly unbound.
    Daily requirement 1-1.5g/day

13
Physiology
  • Regulation of Calcium Phosphate Metabolism
  • Peak bone mass at 16-25 years.
  • Bone loss 0.3- 0.5 per year (2-3 per year after
    6th decade).
  • Parathyroid Hormone (PTH)
  • Vitamin D3
  • Calcitonin
  • Other Hormones
    Estrogen Prevents
    bone loss
    Corticosteroids Increases
    bone loss
    Thyroid hormones Leads
    to osteoporosis
    Growth hormones
    Cause positive calcium balance

    Growth factors

14
(No Transcript)
15
Physiology
16
(No Transcript)
17
Physiology
18
Physiology
  • Serum Ca Phosphate in equilibrium with Ca
    Phosphate in bone.

19
Physiology
20
Patho physiology
21
Patho physiology
22
Etiology
  • Calcium deficiency
  • Hypo-phosphataemia
  • Defect in Vitamin D metabolism
  • Nutritional
  • Diet oily fish, eggs, breakfast cereals
  • Antacid abuse, causing reduced dietary phosphate
    binding
  • underexposure to sunlight
  • Elderly individuals with minimal sun exposure
  • Dark skin, skin covering when outside

23
Etiology
  • Calcium deficiency
  • Hypo-phosphataemia
  • Defect in Vitamin D metabolism
  • intestinal mal-absorption
  • Coeliac
  • Intestinal bypass
  • Post-Gastrectomy
  • Chronic pancreatitis
  • Biliary disease (reduced absorption of Vitamins)
  • Small bowel disease

24
Etiology
  • Calcium deficiency
  • Hypo-phosphataemia
  • Defect in Vitamin D metabolism
  • liver kidney diseases
  • Fat mal-absorption syndromes
  • Kidney failure RTA, Renal osteodystrophy
  • Epilepsy phenytoin, phenobarbitorate
  • Genetic disease

25
Etiology
  • Other Etiologies
  • Receptor Defects
  • Altered phosphate homeostasis

26
(No Transcript)
27
Pathology
28
Symptoms Signs
  • Bone pain , backache
  • Muscle weakness
  • Vertebral collapse kyphosis
  • loss of height
  • Deformities stress fractures

29
Symptoms Signs
  • Osteomalacia in adults starts insidiously as
    aches and pains in the lumbar region and thighs,
    spreading later to the arms and ribs.
  • Pain is non-radiating, symmetrical, and
    accompanied by tenderness in the involved bones.
  • Proximal muscles are weak, and there is
    difficulty in climbing up stairs and getting up
    from a squatting position

30
Symptoms Signs
  • Physical signs include deformities like lordosis.
  • Pathologic fractures due to weight bearing may
    develop.
  • Most of the time, the only alleged symptom is
    chronic and bony ache which is only revealed by
    pressure or shocks.

31
Symptoms Signs
  • Rickets 
  • Tetanus , convulsions, failure to thrive
  • restlessness, muscular flaccidity
  • Flattening of skull (craniotabes)
  • Thickening of wrists from epiphyseal overgrowth,
    Stunted growth, Rickety rosary, spinal curvature,
    Coxa vara, bowing,
  • Fx of long bones
  • Osteomalacia
  • Aches and pains
  • muscle weakness loss of height
  • stress fx

32
biochemistry
  • Hypo-calcaemia
  • Hypo-calcuria
  • High alkaline phosphatase

33
biochemistry
Work up for Osteomalacia
  • Ca , P , Alk ph
  • 24 h urinary Ca
  • 25 (OH) Vit-D
  • 1 , 25 (OH) Vit-D
  • PTH
  • Bone Biopsy

34
biochemistry
1- ca P Nl Alk ph 2- ca
Nl P Alk ph 3- ca
P Alk ph

24 h Urinary ca lt 100 mg / 24 h 24 h Urinary
Hydroxyproline Excretion
35
X-ray
  • Rickets
  • - Growth plate widening thickening
  • - Metaphyseal cupping
  • - Diaphyseal deformities
  • Osteomalacia
  • - Looser zone , biconcave vertebra , protrusio
    acetabuli
  • - Spontaneous fractures
  • Signs of secondary hyperparathyroidism

36
X-ray
  • Loosers zones
  • incomplete stress Fx with healing lacking
    calcium, on compression side of long bones. 
  • Codfish vertebrae due to pressure of discs
  • Trefoil pelvis, due to indentation of acetabulae
    stress fx

37
Loosers zones
X-ray
38
X-ray
39
X-ray
40
Treatment
  • Depends on the cause
  • Nutritional
    Vitamin D
    deficiency
    Dietary chelators of calcium

  • Phytates
  • Oxalates
    Phosphorus
    deficiency (unusual)
  • Antacid abuse

41
Treatment
  • Depends on the cause
  • Gastro-intestinal absorption defects
    Post-gastrectomy

    Biliary disease

    Enteric absorption defects
  • Short bowel syndrome
  • Rapid onset (gluten-sensitive
    enteropathy) Inflammatory bowel
    disease
  • Crohns
  • Celiac

42
Treatment
  • Depends on the cause
  • Renal tubular defects
    Vitamin D
    dependant
  • type I
  • type II
  • Treatment High levels of vit D


  • Vitamin D resistant (familial hypophosphatemic
    rickets)
  • Treatment Phosphate 1-3 gm
    daily, Vit D3 high dose
    Fanconi syndrome I, II, III
    Renal tubular
    acidosis

43
Treatment
  • Depends on the cause
  • Renal Osteodystrophy in chronic renal failure
  • Miscellaneous
    Hypophosphatasia

    Anticonvulsant therapy
  • SURGERY
  • For deformities

44
Treatment
45
Treatment
  • Natural sources cheese, sardines, salmon, dark
    leafy vegetables sesame seeds.

46
Any Questions?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com