## Correct Answer: C. Osteoporosis Osteoporosis is a metabolic bone disease characterized by decreased bone mineral density (BMD) with preserved mineralization but reduced bone mass. In a 55-year-old postmenopausal woman presenting with lower backache and radiographic findings of the lumbosacral spine, osteoporosis is the most likely diagnosis. The classic radiographic sign is **"rugger jersey spine"** appearance with alternating bands of sclerosis and lucency, though more commonly seen in renal osteodystrophy. However, in osteoporosis, the key finding is **generalized loss of bone density** with a "washed-out" or hypodense appearance of vertebral bodies, loss of trabecular detail, and increased vertebral fracture risk. The vertebral bodies appear radiolucent with prominent cortical outlines (cortical bone is relatively preserved while trabecular bone is lost). Lower backache in a postmenopausal woman with radiographic evidence of decreased bone density is pathognomonic for osteoporosis. Risk factors include age, female sex, postmenopausal status, low calcium intake, sedentary lifestyle, and smoking—all common in the Indian population. The condition leads to vertebral compression fractures, kyphosis, and chronic pain. Indian guidelines recommend BMD assessment (DEXA scan) and calcium + vitamin D supplementation as first-line management. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Osteomalacia** — Osteomalacia (defective mineralization) presents with **Looser zones** (pseudofractures) and **generalized osteopenia with coarse trabecular pattern**, not the smooth loss of density seen here. While both cause backache, osteomalacia shows characteristic Looser zones at right angles to bone surface—a discriminating radiographic sign absent in osteoporosis. Additionally, osteomalacia patients typically have biochemical evidence of hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and elevated alkaline phosphatase. **B. Ankylosing spondylitis** — Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is an inflammatory spondyloarthropathy causing **bamboo spine** (complete fusion of vertebrae with syndesmophytes), **squaring of vertebral bodies**, and **increased bone density** (osteosclerosis), not osteopenia. AS typically affects young males (HLA-B27 positive), presents with inflammatory back pain and morning stiffness, and shows progressive fusion—radiographically opposite to the decreased density in osteoporosis. The clinical presentation (age, sex, symptom pattern) also differs markedly. **D. Renal osteodystrophy** — Renal osteodystrophy occurs in chronic kidney disease and presents with **rugger jersey spine** (alternating bands of sclerosis and lucency), **secondary hyperparathyroidism**, and **mixed osteoid accumulation**. While it causes backache and spinal changes, it requires evidence of renal dysfunction (elevated creatinine, low GFR, abnormal calcium-phosphate metabolism). A 55-year-old woman with isolated backache and normal renal function would not present with renal osteodystrophy; osteoporosis is far more common in this demographic. ## High-Yield Facts - **Osteoporosis** = decreased BMD with preserved mineralization; **T-score ≤ −2.5 SD** on DEXA defines disease. - **Postmenopausal women** are at highest risk due to estrogen withdrawal; accounts for 1 in 3 women >50 years in India. - **Radiographic signs**: generalized osteopenia, loss of trabecular detail, prominent cortical outlines, increased vertebral fracture risk. - **Looser zones** (pseudofractures) are pathognomonic for **osteomalacia**, not osteoporosis—key discriminator. - **Rugger jersey spine** (alternating sclerosis-lucency bands) indicates **renal osteodystrophy**, not primary osteoporosis. - **First-line management**: calcium 1000–1200 mg/day + vitamin D 800–1000 IU/day; bisphosphonates for T-score <−2.5 with fracture risk. ## Mnemonics **OSTEOPOROSIS vs OSTEOMALACIA (Radiographic Clue)** **OSTEO-PORO** = POROus (empty, lucent, washed-out) | **OSTEO-MALACIA** = MALformed (Looser zones, coarse trabeculae). Use: When you see a washed-out spine in an elderly woman, think porous (osteoporosis); when you see pseudofractures, think malformed (osteomalacia). **RUGGER JERSEY = Renal Osteodystrophy** **RUGGER** (striped jersey pattern) = **RENAL** disease. Alternating bands of sclerosis (cortical) and lucency (trabecular) from secondary hyperparathyroidism. Use: If you see rugby-stripe pattern on spine X-ray, immediately think kidneys, not primary bone disease. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs postmenopausal backache with radiographic osteopenia to lure students into choosing osteomalacia (which also causes backache and osteopenia) or renal osteodystrophy (which has dramatic radiographic patterns). The key discriminator is the **absence of Looser zones** (ruling out osteomalacia) and **absence of rugger jersey pattern** (ruling out renal osteodystrophy), leaving osteoporosis as the diagnosis of exclusion in a typical postmenopausal woman. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, postmenopausal osteoporosis is vastly more common than osteomalacia or renal osteodystrophy in women presenting with isolated backache. A simple DEXA scan (increasingly available in urban India) confirms the diagnosis and guides bisphosphonate therapy—critical for fracture prevention in a population with high falls risk due to poor nutrition and limited mobility in older women. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 26 (Bone and Joint Diseases); Harrison Ch. 396 (Osteoporosis); KD Tripathi Ch. 62 (Vitamin D and Bone Metabolism)_
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