Bone Physiology & Metabolism - Skeleton's Blueprint
- Cells: Osteoblasts (form bone, secrete osteoid), Osteoclasts (resorb bone), Osteocytes (mechanosensors). š Blasts Build, Clasts Chew.
- Matrix: Organic (Collagen Type I), Inorganic (Hydroxyapatite $Ca_{10}(PO_4)_6(OH)_2$).
- Hormones:
- PTH: ā Serum Ca, ā resorption (via RANKL).
- Vit D (Calcitriol): ā Ca/PO4 absorption, mineralization.
- Calcitonin: ā Serum Ca, inhibits osteoclasts (minor).
- RANKL/OPG System: RANKL activates osteoclasts; OPG (decoy receptor) inhibits.
ā OPG (Osteoprotegerin) is a decoy receptor for RANKL, preventing osteoclast activation and reducing bone resorption.

Osteoporosis - Fragile Framework
- Definition: Systemic skeletal disease with ā bone mass & microarchitectural deterioration of bone tissue, leading to ā bone fragility & fracture risk. Mineralization is normal.
- Types & Causes:
- Primary: Postmenopausal (Type I - rapid loss, trabecular bone), Senile (Type II - slower loss, cortical & trabecular).
- Secondary: Glucocorticoids (most common drug-induced), alcohol, smoking, immobilization, endocrine disorders (e.g., hyperparathyroidism, hyperthyroidism), malnutrition (Ca/Vit D deficiency).
- Pathogenesis: Imbalance between bone resorption (ā osteoclast activity) & formation (ā osteoblast activity). Estrogen deficiency ā āRANKL, āOPG.
- Clinical Features: Often asymptomatic until fracture. Common sites: vertebrae (compression fractures ā height loss, kyphosis), femoral neck, distal radius (Colles' fracture).
- Diagnosis:
- Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA): T-score ⤠-2.5 SD.
- (Osteopenia: T-score between -1.0 and -2.5 SD).
- Serum calcium, phosphate, and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) are typically normal.

- Morphology: Thinned cortex, reduced number & thickness of trabeculae, especially horizontal trabeculae, leading to loss of interconnectivity.
ā Vertebral compression fractures are the most common clinical manifestation of postmenopausal osteoporosis due to predominant loss of trabecular bone.
Rickets & Osteomalacia - Bendy Bone Blues
- Defective bone mineralization: Rickets (children; affects growth plates & osteoid), Osteomalacia (adults; affects osteoid).
- Etiology:
- Vitamin D deficiency (āintake, āsunlight, malabsorption).
- Impaired Vitamin D metabolism (liver/kidney disease, certain drugs).
- Phosphate depletion (e.g., renal tubular acidosis, Fanconi syndrome).
- Pathophysiology: āActive Vit D ā āIntestinal $Ca^{2+}$ & $PO_4^{3-}$ absorption ā āSerum $Ca^{2+}$ ā āPTH ā āBone resorption & āRenal $PO_4^{3-}$ reabsorption ā Mineralization defect.
- Labs: āSerum 25(OH)D, ā/$Ca^{2+}$ (or normal), āSerum $PO_4^{3-}$, āAlkaline Phosphatase (ALP), āPTH.
- Rickets: Craniotabes, rachitic rosary, pigeon chest (pectus carinatum), Harrison's sulcus, bowing of legs (genu varum/valgum), widened epiphyses (cupping, fraying).
- Osteomalacia: Diffuse bone pain, muscle weakness, pathologic fractures, pseudofractures (Looser's zones).
ā Looser's zones (pseudofractures) are characteristic radiologic findings in osteomalacia, appearing as transverse radiolucent bands, often bilateral and symmetrical, perpendicular to the bone cortex (e.g., femoral neck, pubic rami).
Hyperparathyroidism & Paget's Disease - Chaotic Construction
- Hyperparathyroidism (HPT): Excess PTH ā ābone resorption.
- Primary: Adenoma. Labs: āCa²āŗ, āPOā³ā», āPTH, āALP.
- Secondary: CRF, Vit D def. Labs: ā/N Ca²āŗ, āPOā³⻠(CRF), āPTH, āALP.
- Bone: Osteitis fibrosa cystica (OFC), brown tumors, subperiosteal resorption, "salt & pepper" skull.
- š "Stones, bones, groans, moans."
- Paget's Disease (Osteitis Deformans): Chaotic bone remodeling; ?Paramyxovirus, SQSTM1.
- Phases: Lytic ā Mixed ā Sclerotic (woven bone).
- Clinical: Bone pain, deformity (āhat size), fractures, deafness.
- Labs: Markedly āALP; Ca²⺠& POā³⻠normal.
- X-ray: Osteoporosis circumscripta, "cotton wool" skull, "blade of grass" sign.
- Histo: Mosaic/jigsaw pattern (cement lines).
- Complication: Osteosarcoma (<1%).
ā Isolated, markedly elevated serum ALP is a hallmark of Paget's disease.

Renal Osteodystrophy - Kidney's Skeletal Storm
- Bone disease in CKD from dysregulated $Ca^{2+}$, $PO_4$, Vitamin D, and PTH.
- Key driver: Secondary hyperparathyroidism (āPTH) due to āactive Vit D, ā$PO_4$, ā$Ca^{2+}$.
- Spectrum:
- Osteitis fibrosa cystica (OFC): High-turnover state with marrow fibrosis.
- Adynamic bone disease: Low-turnover state, common with dialysis.
- Osteomalacia: Low-turnover, impaired mineralization due to Vit D deficiency.

ā Classic X-ray signs: "Rugger jersey spine", subperiosteal resorption (e.g., phalanges). Brown tumors (cysts) in severe OFC.
HighāYield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Osteoporosis: Reduced bone mass, normal mineralization; vertebral crush fractures classic.
- Rickets/Osteomalacia: Defective mineralization from Vitamin D deficiency; Looser's zones, bowing legs.
- Primary Hyperparathyroidism: āPTH causes osteitis fibrosa cystica (brown tumors), "stones, bones, groans".
- Paget's Disease (Osteitis Deformans): Disordered bone remodeling; mosaic pattern histology, āALP, risk of osteosarcoma.
- Renal Osteodystrophy: Bone changes in CRF, includes secondary HPT, osteomalacia.
- Fibrous Dysplasia: Ground-glass X-ray; McCune-Albright syndrome (polyostotic, cafƩ-au-lait spots).
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