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Adult Medical-Surgical Nursing Musculo-skeletal Module: Pagets Disease
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Bone Formation Bone is a dynamic tissue constantly reforming and resorbing Bone cells (osteocytes) are: Osteoblasts (bone formation) Osteoclasts (bone destruction, resorption, remolding)
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Bone Formation Osteoblasts secrete collagen and glycoproteins to form a bone matrix Deposit minerals in the matrix (calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, chloride) Osteoclasts resorb calcium and minerals from bone causing depletion
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Hormones Affecting Bone Turnover Hormones which promote bone formation: (inhibit resorption) Oestrogen and calcitonin Testosterone in males ( ↓ with age) Hormone which increases bone turnover and resorption: Parathormone ( ↑ with age) (Also insufficient oestrogen/ calcitonin/ testosterone)
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Factors Influencing Bone Formation Local stress: usage/ weight-bearing and walking aid bone formation (Immobility leads to increased calcium resorption from bone and osteoporosis) Adequate calcium and vitamin D (intestinal absorption of calcium) Parathormone/ Calcitonin activity Blood supply (inadequate → necrosis)
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Bone Pathology
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Bone Pathology: Classification Osteoporosis Osteomalacia Pagets Disease Bone tumour: Benign Malignant primary Metastases
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Pagets Disease
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Pagets Disease: Description Pagets disease (osteitis deformans) is a condition of localised rapid bone turnover Affects the skull, femur, tibia, pelvic bones, vertebrae Affects 2-3% of population > 50 years Affects males more than females Causes deformity and risk of pathological fracture
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Pagets Disease: Aetiology Cause unknown Family history Increased risk with age
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Pagets Disease: Pathophysiology Localised rapid bone turnover: Primary proliferation of osteoclasts (bone resorption) Compensatory ↑ osteoblastic activity Leads to a disorganised pattern of bone in the areas affected (mosaic): Highly vascular, structurally weak areas
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Pagets Disease: Outcome Bones are prone to: Deformity Pathological fracture
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Pagets Disease: Clinical Manifestations Insidious onset May only show on a routine Xray
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Pagets Disease: Clinical Manifestations Skeletal deformity: Bowing of tibia and fibula, deformed pelvic bones, cortical thickening long bones Ape-like posture Skull enlargement: face appears small, triangular, hearing affected (cranial nerve) Pain in back, joints, arthritis, warmth tenderness over bones ( ↑ vascularity)
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Pagets Disease: Diagnosis Xrays confirm Bone scans Bone biopsy Serum alkaline phosphatase ( ↑ ) ↑ urinary hydroxyproline ( ↑ osteoblastic activity) Serum calcium is normal
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Pagets Disease: Medical Management Control weight Adequate dietary calcium and vitamin D and supplements Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) Drugs to reduce bone resorption/ turnover: Calcitonin, Fosamax Cytotoxic antibiotic (Mithracin) if severe
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Pagets Disease: Management of Complications May require hearing aid Hip replacement surgery Fracture care: closed or open reduction and internal fixation Regular follow-up examination for early detection treatment
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Pagets Disease: Nursing Considerations Ensure patient education about condition and means of preventing deterioration Adequate dietary and calcium/ vitamin D supplements (note levels) Weight control Psychological/ emotional support Careful gentle handling and ensure adequate pain relief. Monitor hearing
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