🦴 Metabolic Bone Disease
Osteoporosis, osteomalacia, hyperparathyroidism, and renal osteodystrophy — biochemistry, radiology, and management for MRCS.
Metabolic Bone Disease — Overview
Metabolic bone diseases represent disorders of bone quality or quantity resulting from systemic disturbances in calcium, phosphate, vitamin D, or parathyroid hormone (PTH) metabolism. They share overlapping biochemistry but have distinct pathologies, X-ray findings, and treatments that are high-yield for MRCS.
The Surgical Connection
Metabolic bone disease is directly relevant to surgery in multiple ways: osteoporotic fragility fractures are the most common surgical emergency in the elderly (hip fracture); hyperparathyroidism may be encountered as an incidental hypercalcaemia on pre-operative bloods; and post-thyroidectomy or post-parathyroidectomy hypocalcaemia represents an acute surgical complication. Renal osteodystrophy matters in patients undergoing renal transplant or vascular access surgery.