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Fragility Fractures

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Fragility Fractures - Defining the Snap

  • Fractures resulting from low-energy trauma (e.g., fall from standing height or less), indicating compromised bone strength.
  • Strongly associated with osteoporosis; may be the first sign.
  • Common sites: Vertebrae (compression), hip (femoral neck), distal radius (Colles'), proximal humerus.
  • Epidemiology: Incidence ↑ with age, particularly in postmenopausal women and men >50 years.
  • Impact: Significant pain, disability, ↓ quality of life, ↑ mortality risk, and substantial healthcare costs.

⭐ A fragility fracture is defined by the WHO as a fracture caused by injury that would be insufficient to fracture a normal bone; the result of reduced compressive and/or torsional strength of bone.

Osteoporotic vs. Normal Bone Microarchitecture

Fragility Fractures - Why They Crumble

⭐ Osteoporosis is the most common underlying cause, characterized by low bone mass (T-score ≤ -2.5) and microarchitectural deterioration of bone tissue.

  • Definition: Fracture from low-energy trauma (e.g., fall from standing height or less).
  • Pathophysiology: Bone strength is compromised due to:
    • ↓ Bone Mineral Density (BMD).
    • Impaired bone quality (microarchitecture, turnover, mineralization).
  • Key Underlying Causes:
    • Osteoporosis: Primary culprit.
    • Osteomalacia: Defective mineralization (often ↓ Vitamin D).
    • Hyperparathyroidism: ↑ PTH → ↑ bone resorption.
    • Paget's Disease: Disorganized, weak bone structure.
    • Medications: e.g., chronic corticosteroids.

Healthy vs. Ageing Bone Microarchitecture & Cells

  • Common Sites: Vertebrae (compression), hip, distal radius (Colles'), proximal humerus.

Fragility Fractures - Spotting the Risk

Fragility fracture: results from low-energy trauma (e.g., fall from standing height or less).

  • Key Risk Factors:

    • Age >50 yrs; Prior fragility fracture (strongest)
    • Glucocorticoid use (e.g., ≥5mg pred/day, ≥3 months)
    • Low BMI (<19 kg/m²); Parental hip fracture history
    • Current smoking; Alcohol ≥3 units/day
    • Secondary osteoporosis (e.g., RA, hypogonadism)
  • Assessment Tools:

    • FRAX®: Estimates 10-yr major osteoporotic & hip fracture probability.

      ⭐ FRAX score predicting a 10-year probability of major osteoporotic fracture ≥ 20% or hip fracture ≥ 3% often warrants pharmacological intervention in many guidelines.

    • BMD (DXA): T-score ≤ -2.5 indicates osteoporosis.

Fragility Fractures - Sites & Fixes

  • Definition: Fractures from low-energy trauma (e.g., fall from standing height) in weakened bone (osteoporosis).
  • Common Sites:
    • Vertebrae (spine)
    • Hip (femoral neck, intertrochanteric)
    • Distal Radius (Colles' fracture)
    • Proximal Humerus

X-ray of hip fragility fracture (A) and normal hip (B)

  • Clinical Presentation:
    • Sudden onset pain, often after minimal trauma.
    • Deformity, swelling, ↓ range of motion.
    • Vertebral: Height loss, kyphosis, back pain.
  • Diagnosis:
    • X-ray: Confirms fracture.
    • DEXA scan: T-score ≤ -2.5 indicates osteoporosis.
  • Management Principles:
    • Acute Care: Pain relief (analgesics), immobilisation (splint/cast), DVT prophylaxis.
    • Fixation (Site-Specific):
      • Hip: ORIF (screws, plates, nails), hemiarthroplasty, total hip replacement (THR).
      • Vertebral: Conservative (bracing, analgesia); vertebroplasty/kyphoplasty for persistent pain.
      • Distal Radius: Closed reduction & casting; ORIF for unstable/displaced fractures.
    • Secondary Prevention (Crucial):
      • Calcium & Vitamin D supplementation.
      • Anti-osteoporotic meds: Bisphosphonates (alendronate), teriparatide, denosumab, SERMs (raloxifene).

⭐ Vertebral, hip (femoral neck, intertrochanteric), and distal radius (Colles') fractures are the most common sites for fragility fractures.

  • Goal: Restore function, prevent future fractures, improve quality of life. 📌 FRAX tool estimates 10-year fracture probability.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Fragility fractures result from low-energy trauma (e.g., fall from standing height).
  • Common sites: vertebrae, hip (proximal femur), wrist (distal radius).
  • Osteoporosis is the primary cause; DEXA T-score ≤ -2.5 is diagnostic.
  • FRAX score estimates 10-year major osteoporotic fracture risk.
  • Management: calcium, vitamin D, bisphosphonates, and fall prevention.
  • Rule out secondary causes like long-term steroid use.
  • A prior fragility fracture strongly ↑ risk of future fractures.

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