Etiologies
Manifestations
Diagnostics
Hormones
Glands
100

This disease presents in adults as a result of insufficient sunlight exposure or kidney failure.

What is osteomalacia?

100

Manifestations include water intoxication and symptoms of hyponatremia (such as confusion and potentially seizures).

What is SIADH?

(Syndrome of Inappropriate Antidiuretic Hormone)

100

Diagnosed by bone density scans.

What is osteoporosis?

100
"Puts the calcium in the heme."

What is PTH?

100

This releases ADH.

What is the posterior pituitary gland?

200

These tumors secrete hormones that are unrelated to their tissue.

What are ectopic cancers?

200

Patient experiences pain, swelling, impaired mobility, noticeable deformities, pathological fractures, and compression fractures (back pain and height loss).

What is osteoporosis?

200

This test measures the concentration of solutes in the urine.

What is Urine Specific Gravity (USG)?

200

Stimulates calcium deposition via osteoblasts.

What is Calcitonin?

200

This is overactive in pheochromocytoma patients.

What is the adrenal medulla?

300

These cells are proliferated in the adrenal medulla, causing pheochromocytoma.

What are chromaffin cells?

300

Manifestations resemble a sympathetic response; dangerously high BP, bounding palpitations, sweating, anxiety, and tremors.

What is pheochromocytoma?

300

Labs show decreased ADH and a low USG.

What is Diabetes Insipidus?

300

Increases serum calcium via stimulation of osteoclasts to release calcium from bone.

What is Parathyroid Hormone (PTH)?

300

Hyperfunction of these can be inadvertently dangerous to the nervous system.

What are the parathyroid glands?

400

This disease has an unknown etiology that causes osteoclasts to be overactive and osteoblasts to misplace bone.

What is Paget's Disease?
400

Bones become soft and brittle. This causes pain, physical deformities, and can lead to compression fractures.

What is Paget's Disease?

400

Labs show low serum calcium and low PTH.

What is primary hypoparathyroidism?

400

Decreased levels of this hormone are implicated in post-menopausal patients with osteoporosis.

What is estrogen?

400

Decreases both reabsorption of calcium by the kidneys AND absorption of calcium in the GI tract.

What is the thyroid gland?

500

Diabetes Insipidus that occurs due to renal tubule damage preventing the kidneys from responding to ADH. 

What is nephrogenic Diabetes Insipidus?

(neurogenic is caused by the posterior pituitary failing to release ADH)

500

Patient experiences bone pain, neurological symptoms (such as confusion & headache), kidney stone formation, and eventually coma if untreated.

What is hypercalcemia? 

(will also accept hyperparathyroidism)

500

Urinary tests would show elevations in epinephrine and norepinephrine (catecholamines).

What is pheochromocytoma?

500

Regulated by baroreceptors detecting changes in blood volume and osmoreceptors detecting changes in osmolarity.

What is Antidiuretic Hormone (ADH)?

500

Dysfunction can cause paresthesia, muscle excitability, tetany, and seizures.

What are the parathyroid glands?

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