Title: RACHITIS, VITAMIN D RICKETSIA, OSTEOMALACIA
1RACHITIS, VITAMIN D RICKETSIA, OSTEOMALACIA
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4RICKETS
- Disorder of mineralization of the bone matrix /
osteoid in growing bone - Involved growth plate
- Newly trabecular formed
- Cortical bone
Osteomalacia After cessation of growth
Involves only a bone, not the growth plate
5Risk factors
- Living in northern latitudes (gt30o)
- Dark skinned children
- Decreased exposure to sunlight
- Maternal vitamin D deficiency
- Diets low in calcium, phosphorus and vit. D
- Prolonged parenteral nutrition in infancy with an
inadequate supply of intravenous calcium and
phosphate - Intestinal malabsorption
6Defective production of 1,25(OH)2D3
- Hereditary type I vitamin D-resistant (or
dependent) rickets (mutation which abolishes
activity of renal hydroxylase) - Familial (X-linked ) hypophosphataemic rickets
renal tubular defect in phosphate transport - Chronic renal disease
- Fanconi syndrome (renal loss of phosphate)
- Target organ resistance to 1,25(OH)2D3-
hereditary vitamin D-dependent rickets type II
(due to mutations in vitamin D receptor gene).
7Calcium homeostasis - PTH action
-ve feedback
Decreased Ca Clearance
1,25-(OH)2D
Increased Resorption
Increased Ca Absorption
Serum Ca2
8Vitamin D Metabolism
Calcium absorption ?
9PTH Response to Hypocalcemia
-ve feedback
PTH ?
1,25-(OH)2D ?
Increase
10Role of Calcium
- Bone Growth
- Blood Clotting
- Maintenance of trans membrane potential
- Cell replication
- Stimulus-contraction stimulus-contracting
coupling - Second messenger process
11Intestine
- Increases calcium binding protein
- Active transport in the jejunal cells
- Phosphorus ions absorption through specific
phosphate carrier - Alkaline phosphatase (AP) synthesis
- ATP-ase sensibility to calcium ions
12Factors in Calcium Homeostasis
- Ca sensing receptor (CaSR) ?
- membrane protein that binds Ca
- determines the set-point for PTH secretion.
- Parathyroid hormone (PTH)
- 84 amino acid peptide
- ? increases calcium concentration
- ? calcium reabsorption in the kidney
- ? calcium resorption from bone
- ? intestinal calcium absorption via ? renal
formation 1,25-diOH-D).
13Factors in Calcium Homeostasis
- Vitamin D (1,25-diOH-D).
- ? absorption / reabsorption of calcium
(intestines, bone, and kidney). - Calcitonin.
- 32 amino acid peptide
- Secretion ? if serum calcium ? (antagonist PTH)
- inhibits osteoclast activity ? bone calcium
resorption ?
14Calcium metabolism
15Calcium Distribution in Plasma
Ionised Calcium 1.0 mmol/L
Total Calcium 2.0 mmol/L
Bound Calcium 0.95 mmol/L
Complexed Calcium 0.05 mmol/L
16Pathophysiology of Calcium
- Disorders of homeostatic regulators
- PTH
- vitamin D
- Disorders of the skeleton
- bone metastases
- Disorders of effector organs
- gut - malabsorption
- kidney
- Diet
17- Breast milk contains 30-50IU/liter, cows milk
20-30IU/l, egg yolk contains 20-50IU/10gr. - 80 of the vitamin D is absorbed in the small
intestine in the present of normal biliary
secretion. - Vitamin D reaches the blood through thoracic duct
along with chilomicrons.
18- Calcium regulation in the blood is as follows
- Vitamin D2 in the food (exogenous) vitamin D3
(skin, endogenous) gtliver microsomes - gt25(OH) D3 gt Mitochondrial kidney tubules
membrane activated 3 forms - 24,25 (OH)2 D3 1,24,25 (OH)2 D3 1,25 (OH)2 D3
!!! last more active. - In placental macrophage of pregnancy women are
present 1,25(OH)2 D3
19- Serum calcium narrow physiological range
- Result of complex interaction process ? vitamin
D, parathyroid hormone (PTH), and the calcium
sensing receptor. - Serum calcium
- 50 free (ionized)
- 40 protein bound (80 albumin 20 globulin)
- 10 complexed (phosphate, citrate, bicarbonate,
lactate)
20Physiology of PTH
Bone ? Resorption free Ca2, orthophosphate, Mg, citrate, hydroxyproline,osteocalcin.
GIT ? Calcium absorption indirectly through vit D metabolism
Kidney ? phosphate excretion via proximal tubules Inhibits bicarbonate reabsorption ? metabolic acidosis ? favours calcium ionization ? ? bone resorption dissociation of calcium from plasma protein binding sites
21Causes of rickets
Vit. D deficiency Lack of adequate sunlight Unsupplemented breast-fed infant. Total parenteral nutrition (TPN)
Ca deficiency Lack of dietary Ca Inadequate Ca in TPN
Phosphat def. Breast-fed infant Inadequate PO4 in TPN
22Causes of rickets
Vit. D deficiency Lack of adequate sunlight Consumption of diet low in fortified foods Unsupplemented breast-fed infant. Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) UV / increased sunlight exposure Vit D2 Vit D2 for premature Vit D2 in TPN / oral
Ca deficiency Lack of dietary Ca Inadequate Ca in TPN Ca 700 mg/day Ca in prmature / TPN
Phosphat def. Breast-fed infant Inadequate PO4 in TPN
23CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
- Rickets may develop in any age of an infant, more
frequent at 3-6mo, early in prematures. - The first signs of hypocalcaemia are CNS changes-
excitation, restlessness, excessive sweated
during sleep and feeding, tremors of the chin and
extremities.
24- Skin and muscle changes- pallor, occipital
alopecia, fragile nails and hair, muscular
hypotony,motor retardation. - Complications- apnoea, stridor, low calcium level
with neuromuscular irritability (tetany). - CNS changes are sometimes interpreted as CNS
trauma and the administration of the
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26ACUTE SIGNS
- Have acute and subacute clinical signs
- Craniotabes acute sign of rickets, osteolyses
detected by pressing firmly over the occipital or
posterior parietal bones, ping-pong ball
sensation will be felt. Large anterior
fontanella, with hyperflexible borders, cranial
deformation with asymmetric occipital flattening.
27SUBACUTE SIGNS
- Subacute signs are all the following frontal and
temporal bossing - False closure of sutures (increase protein
matrix), in the X-ray craniostenosis is absent. - Maxilla in the form of trapezium, abnormal
dentition.
28- Late dental evolution, enamel defects in the
temporary and permanent dentition. - Enlargement of costo-chondral junctions-rickets
rosary - Thorax, sternum deformation, softened lower rib
cage at the site of attachment of the diaphragm-
Harrison groove.
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30Subacute signs
- Spinal column- scoliosis, lordosis, kyphosis.
- Pelvis deformity, entrance is narrowed (add to
cesarean section in females) - Extremities- palpated wrist expansion from
rickets, tibia anterior convexity, bowlegs or
knock kness legs. - Deformities of the spine, pelvis and legs result
in reduced stature, rachitic dwarfism. - Delayed psychomotor development (heat holding,
sitting, standing due to hypotonia).
31LABORATORY DATA
- Serum calcium level (N2.2-2.6mmol/l). At the
level lt2.0mmol/l convulsions sets in. - Phosphorus normal (1.5-1.8mmol/l). Normal ratio
of Ca P 21 in rickets become 31 41. - Serum 25(OH)D3 (N282.1ng/ml) and
1,25(OH)2D3(N0.0350.003ng/ml) - Serum alkaline phosphatase is elevated
gt500mmol/l. - Thyrocalcitonin can be appreciated
(N23.63.3pM/l) - Serum parathyroid hormone (N5985.0pM/l)
- In urine Aminoaciduria gt1.0mg/kg/day
- Urinary excretion of 35 cyclic AMP
- Decreased calcium excretion (N50-150mg/24h)
32Radiological findings
- Only in difficult diagnostic cases.
- X-ray of the distal ulna and radius concave
(cupping) ends normally sharply, Fraying
rachitic metaphyses and a widened epiphyseal
plate. - Osteoporosis of clavicle, costal bones, humerus.
- Greenstick fractures.
- Thinning of the cortex, diaphysis and the cranial
bones.
33EVOLUTION
- The evolution is slow with spontaneous healing at
the age of 2-3 years. - If treated can be cured in 2-3mo with the
normalization of the skeletal and the cellular
system. - Gibbous, palatal deformity and the narrow pelvis
may persist.
34DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Osteogenesis imperfecta, chondrodystrophy,
congenital diseases- CMV, rubella, syphilis. - Chronic digestive and malabsorption disorders.
- Hereditary Fanconis disease, phosphorus
diabetes, renal tubular acidosis.
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36Radiology
Thinning of cortex Widening, cuping
metaphyses Decreased bone density
Biochemistry Ca serum low / N ALP
increased PTH increased
37PROPHILAXIS IN RICKETS
- Specific antenatal prophylactic dose
administration 500-1000IU/day of vitamin D3
solution at the 28-th week of pregnancy. - The total dose administered is 135000-180000IU.
In term infants prophylactic intake of vitamin
D2 700IU/d started at 10 days of age during the
first 2 years of life in premature the dose may
increase to 1000IU/day.
38PROPHILAXIS IN RICKETS
- WHO recommendation for rickets prophilaxis in a
children coming from unfavorable conditions and
who have difficult access to hospitals is
200000IU vitamin D2 i/muscular, - On the 7day, 2, 4, 6 month- total dose 800000IU.
In case of the necessary prolongation 700IU/day
till 24mo are given.
39SPECIFIC TREATMENT IN RICHETS
- The treatment is with vitamin D3 depending on the
grade. - In grade I- 2000-4000IU/day for 4-6weeks, totally
120000-180000IU. - In grade II- 4000-6000IU/day for 4-6 weeks,
totally 180000-230000IU. - In grade III- 8000-12000IU/day for 6-8 weeks,
totally 400000-700000IU.
40SPECIFIC TREATMENT IN RICHETS
- Along with vitamin D, calcium is also
administered (40 mg/kg/day for a term baby, - 80 mg/kg/day for a premature baby) also indicate
vitamin BC preparations. - From the 7-th day of the treatment massage can
be started. Intramuscular administration - of ATP solution in case of myotonia 1ml/day is
preferred.
41Vit D. def TPN 0,5 ug/kg/day Oral 400-800 IU
daily
Ca deficiency Premature 75-150 mg/dl Oral 200
mg/kg/day IV solution 20 mg/dl
42RICKETS COMPLICATIONS
- Rickets tetany in result of low concentration of
serum calcium (lt2mmol/l), failure of the PTH
compensation and muscular irritability occur. - Hypervitaminosis D
43HYPERVITAMINOSIS D
- Symptoms develop in hypersensitivity to vitamin D
children or after1-3mo of high doses intakes of
vitamin D they include hypotonia, anorexia,
vomiting, irritability, constipation, polydipsia,
polyuria, sleep disorder, dehydration. High serum
level of acetone, nitrogen and - Cagt2.9mmol/l are found. Increase calcium
concentration in urine may provoke incontinence,
renal damage and calcification.