Osteomalacia and osteoporosis in femoral neck fracture.
Iliac crest bone histomorphometry, plasma and urine biochemistry and clinical history were examined in 78 unselected patients (68 women, 10 men) at the time of femoral fracture. Histological abnormalities occurred in 56 of the 78 biopsies. The commonest of these was a low bone volume of less than 15% which, irrespective of other abnormal histological features, was present in 37 of the biopsies. On the basis of the histomorphometry, patients could be classified into four main groups. Normal histomorphometry (bone volume greater than 15%, osteoid surfaces less than 24%, mineralising surface greater than 60%) was present in 22 patients, 23 had osteoporosis as the only abnormality (bone volume less than 15%, osteoid surface less than 24%, mineralising surface greater than 60%), nine had osteomalacia (osteoid surfaces greater than 24%, mineralising surface less than 60%, osteoid width greater than 13 microns) and 13 had decreased mineralising surfaces. Of the remainder, five had increased osteoid surface and six had insufficient osteoid to assess mineralising surface. Plasma and urine biochemistry in the four groups showed that, compared to age-matched controls, all groups had reduced plasma albumin. In comparison to the group with normal histomorphometry, patients with osteoporosis had a higher plasma calcium (P less than 0.01), tubular reabsorption of calcium (P less than 0.05) and plasma vitamin D binding protein (P less than 0.01); patients with osteomalacia had a higher plasma creatinine (P less than 0.02) and parathyroid hormone (P less than 0.02) and lower plasma 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (P less than 0.02), urinary calcium/creatinine ratio (P less than 0.02) and tubular reabsorption of phosphate (P less than 0.02). The biochemistry in patients with decreased mineralising surface was no different from patients with a normal biopsy. The prevalence of both osteoporosis and osteomalacia increased with age and, in subjects over the age of 90, osteoporosis occurred in 71% of patients and osteomalacia occurred in 29% of patients. The osteomalacic group were significantly older than the other three groups (P less than 0.05). The histomorphometry did not relate to the site of fracture (subcapital or intertrochanteric). A history of stroke, gastrectomy, rheumatoid arthritis, steroid treatment, thyroid disease, alcohol abuse and anti-convulsant therapy was present in patients with femoral fracture but did not relate to any particular histomorphometric classification.[1]References
- Osteomalacia and osteoporosis in femoral neck fracture. Hordon, L.D., Peacock, M. Bone and mineral. (1990) [Pubmed]
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