## Correct Answer: D. Paget's disease Paget's disease of bone is a metabolic disorder characterized by abnormal bone remodeling with three phases: lytic, mixed, and sclerotic. The clinical presentation is pathognomonic: **enlarged hat size** (skull involvement causing frontal bossing and increased head circumference), **shin pain** (anterior tibial bowing from weight-bearing stress), and **markedly elevated alkaline phosphatase** reflecting intense osteoblastic activity. The **normal calcium and PTH** levels are crucial discriminators—Paget's disease does not cause hypercalcemia unless immobilization occurs or malignant transformation develops. X-ray findings of **mixed lytic and sclerotic lesions** with characteristic "cotton-wool" appearance in skull and "flame-shaped" lytic fronts in long bones are diagnostic. The disease results from excessive osteoclastic resorption followed by disorganized osteoblastic new bone formation, creating structurally weak but radiodense bone. Incidence in India is lower than Western countries but still significant in elderly populations. Management includes bisphosphonates (alendronate 40 mg daily) or calcitonin for symptomatic disease, with monitoring for complications like pathological fractures, nerve compression, and sarcomatous transformation (1–3% risk). ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Bone metastasis** — While bone metastasis can present with mixed lytic-sclerotic lesions (especially from breast or prostate cancer), it does NOT cause enlarged hat size or shin pain as primary features. Metastatic disease typically presents with focal lesions rather than generalized skeletal involvement, and alkaline phosphatase elevation is less dramatic. The clinical triad of hat size enlargement + shin pain + normal calcium/PTH is specific to Paget's disease. **B. Osteomalacia** — Osteomalacia presents with **low alkaline phosphatase or normal levels**, not markedly elevated as seen here. Biochemically, osteomalacia shows **low 25-OH vitamin D, elevated PTH, and low-normal or low calcium**—opposite to this case's normal calcium and PTH. Radiologically, osteomalacia shows **Looser's zones and generalized osteopenia**, not mixed lytic-sclerotic lesions. Hat size enlargement does not occur in osteomalacia. **C. Primary hyperparathyroidism** — Primary hyperparathyroidism causes **elevated PTH and hypercalcemia**, both explicitly normal in this patient. While alkaline phosphatase may be elevated, the clinical presentation lacks the pathognomonic features of Paget's disease. Bone lesions in hyperparathyroidism are typically osteolytic (subperiosteal resorption, brown tumors) rather than mixed lytic-sclerotic, and hat size enlargement is absent. ## High-Yield Facts - **Paget's disease** presents with the triad: enlarged hat size (skull), shin pain (anterior tibial bowing), and markedly elevated alkaline phosphatase (>4× normal). - **Normal calcium and PTH** in Paget's disease distinguish it from hyperparathyroidism; hypercalcemia only occurs with immobilization or malignant transformation. - **Mixed lytic-sclerotic lesions** with 'cotton-wool' skull and 'flame-shaped' lytic fronts in long bones are pathognomonic radiological findings. - **Bisphosphonates (alendronate 40 mg daily)** are first-line therapy; calcitonin reserved for acute pain or neurological complications. - **Sarcomatous transformation** occurs in 1–3% of Paget's disease cases, typically osteosarcoma; risk increases with disease duration and severity. - **Paget's disease prevalence** is lower in India than Western countries but increases with age; most common in men >60 years. ## Mnemonics **PAGET'S DISEASE TRIAD** **P**ain (shin), **A**lkaline phosphatase (↑↑), **G**rowth (hat size ↑), **E**nlarged bones, **T**ortuous vessels. Remember: Normal Ca²⁺ and PTH rule out hyperparathyroidism. **PAGET'S vs HYPERPARATHYROIDISM** **Paget's**: Normal Ca²⁺, Normal PTH, ↑↑ ALP, Hat size ↑. **Hyperparathyroidism**: ↑ Ca²⁺, ↑ PTH, ↑ ALP, No hat size change. Use this to quickly eliminate option C. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "elevated alkaline phosphatase" with hyperparathyroidism to trap students who confuse metabolic bone diseases; the normal PTH and calcium are the critical discriminators that exclude primary hyperparathyroidism and point to Paget's disease. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, elderly men presenting with progressive hearing loss (from skull involvement) and pathological fractures of the femur should raise suspicion for Paget's disease; bisphosphonate therapy can halt progression and prevent complications like nerve compression and malignant transformation. _Reference: Robbins Ch. 26 (Bone and Joint Diseases); Harrison Ch. 397 (Paget's Disease of Bone)_
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