Osteomalacia and Rickett's

Osteomalacia: qualitative defect of bone with abnormal softening of the bone due to deficient mineralization of osteoid (immature bone) secondary to inadequate amounts of calcium and phosphorus
Rickets: the same disease occurring in children which has subsequent effects on the growing skeleton

Aetiology

  • The principal causes of osteomalacia and rickets involve either insufficient calcium absorption, or phosphate deficiency caused by increased renal losses
  • Vitamin D deficiency - malnutrition/malabsorption, lack of sunlight exposure
  • Hypophosphateamia
    • Re‐feeding syndrome
    • Alcohol abuse - impairs phosphate absorption
    • Malabsorption
    • Renal tubular acidosis
  • Long term anticonvulsant use
  • Chronic kidney disease - reduced phosphate resorption and failure of activation vitamin D, resulting in secondary hyperparathyroidism
    • Some renal diseases are inherited disorders (X‐linked hypophosphataemia or vitamin D resistant rickets)

Pathophysiology

Vitamin D deficiency

  • Vitamin D stimulates absorption of calcium from GI tract, kidney and bone, also iduces osteoblasts to release osteocalcin
  • Vitamin D deficiency leads to hypocalcaemia and elevated PTH
  • This increases calcium absorption, osteoclastic activity, and release of Ca2+ from bone
  • Results in impaired mineralisation of newly formed osteoid (thick osteoid seams)
  • Bone is weakened - prone to fracture (micro-fractures or gross fractures)

Clinical presentation

Symptoms

  • Bone pain - pelvis, spine and femora
  • Symptoms of hypocalcaemia - paraesthesiae, muscle cramps, irritability, fatigue, seizures, brittle nails
  • Sustain pathological fractures easily

Signs

  • Deformities from soft bones (particularly in rickets)
  • Proximal myopathy
  • Dental defects (caries, enamel)

Investigations

  • X-ray - pseudofractures (aka Looser’s zones), particularly of the pubic rami, proximal femora, ulna and ribs, poor cortico-medullary differentiation
notion image
notion image
  • Bloods - ↓ calcium and serum phosphate, ↑ serum ALP

Management

  • Involves vit D therapy with calcium and phosphate supplementation
    • D3 tablets (400-800IU per day after loading with 3200IU per day for 12 weeks) - calcitriol (1-25 dehydroxycholecalciferol), alfacalcidol (1⍺ hydroxycholecalciferol)
    • Combined vitamin D and calcium tablets e.g. adcal D3

Considerations for chronic renal disease

  • Patients may have a very high 25-OH vitamin D so make sure to check 1-25 OH vitamin D
  • Titrate treatment to PTH levels
  • Phosphate binders