Osteomalacia
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| This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (October 2007) |
| ICD-10 | M83. |
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| ICD-9 | 268.2 |
| DiseasesDB | 9351 |
| eMedicine | ped/2014 radio/610 |
| MeSH | D010018 |
Osteomalacia the general term for the softening of the bones due to defective bone mineralization. Osteomalacia in children is known as rickets, and because of this, osteomalacia 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. A common cause of the disease is a deficiency in Vitamin D, which is normally obtained from the diet and/or sunlight exposure.
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Osteomalacia in the adult is most commonly found in confined, dark-skinned, or diet-disbalanced subjects. Many of the effects of the disease overlap with the more common osteoporosis, but the two diseases are significantly different. Osteomalacia is specifically a defect in mineralization of the protein framework known as osteoid. This defective mineralization is mainly caused by lack in vitamine D.
Osteomalacia is derived from Greek: osteo refers to bone, and malacia means softness. In the past, the disease was also known as malacosteon and its Latin-derived equivalent, mollities ossium.
The causes of adult osteomalacia are varied.
- Insufficient nutritional quantities or faulty metabolism of vitamin D or phosphorus
- Renal tubular acidosis
- Malnutrition during pregnancy
- Malabsorption syndrome
Osteomalacia in adults starts insidiously as aches and pains in the lumbar (lower back) 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. Physical signs include deformities like triradiate pelvis and lordosis. The patient has a typical "waddling gait". Pathologic fractures due to weight bearing may develop. Most of the times, the only alleged symptom is chronic fatigue and bone aches are not spontaneous but only revealed by pressure or shocks.
Biochemical features are similar to rickets.The major fact is a collapsed vitamine D rate in blood or serum.
Radiological appearances include
Nutritional osteomalacia responds well to administration of 200000 IU weekly of vitamin D for 4 to 6 weeks, followed by a maintenance dose of 1600 IU daily or 200000 IU every 4 to 6 months.
- osteoporosis
- osteopetrosis, the opposite of osteomalacia
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| Malnutrition | Kwashiorkor - Marasmus |
| Other underconsumption | B vitamins: B1: Beriberi/Wernicke's encephalopathy, B2: Ariboflavinosis, B3: Pellagra, B6: Pyridoxine deficiency, B7: Biotin deficiency, B9: Folate deficiency, B12: Vitamin B12 deficiency
other vitamins: A: Vitamin A deficiency/Bitot's spots, C: Scurvy, D: Rickets/Osteomalacia mineral: Zinc deficiency - Iron deficiency, Magnesium deficiency - Chromium deficiency |
| Hyperalimentation | Obesity - Hypervitaminosis A - Hypervitaminosis D |