Management of osteoporosis

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Osteoporosis or osteopenia occurs in about 44 million Americans, resulting in 1.5 million fragility fractures per year. The consequences of these fractures include pain, disability, depression, loss of independence, and increased mortality. The burden to the heal...

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Main Author: Lewiecki E Michael
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2004-07-01
Series:Clinical and Molecular Allergy
Subjects:
DXA
Online Access:http://www.clinicalmolecularallergy.com/content/2/1/9
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spelling doaj-e29e26382d404d13909d9e363e4479d42020-11-24T21:11:28ZengBMCClinical and Molecular Allergy1476-79612004-07-0121910.1186/1476-7961-2-9Management of osteoporosisLewiecki E Michael<p>Abstract</p> <p>Osteoporosis or osteopenia occurs in about 44 million Americans, resulting in 1.5 million fragility fractures per year. The consequences of these fractures include pain, disability, depression, loss of independence, and increased mortality. The burden to the healthcare system, in terms of cost and resources, is tremendous, with an estimated direct annual USA healthcare expenditure of about $17 billion. With longer life expectancy and the aging of the baby-boomer generation, the number of men and women with osteoporosis or low bone density is expected to rise to over 61 million by 2020. Osteoporosis is a silent disease that causes no symptoms until a fracture occurs. Any fragility fracture greatly increases the risk of future fractures. Most patients with osteoporosis are not being diagnosed or treated. Even those with previous fractures, who are at extremely high risk of future fractures, are often not being treated. It is preferable to diagnose osteoporosis by bone density testing of high risk individuals before the first fracture occurs. If osteoporosis or low bone density is identified, evaluation for contributing factors should be considered. Patients on long-term glucocorticoid therapy are at especially high risk for developing osteoporosis, and may sustain fractures at a lower bone density than those not taking glucocorticoids. All patients should be counseled on the importance of regular weight-bearing exercise and adequate daily intake of calcium and vitamin D. Exposure to medications that cause drowsiness or hypotension should be minimized. Non-pharmacologic therapy to reduce the non-skeletal risk factors for fracture should be considered. These include fall prevention through balance training and muscle strengthening, removal of fall hazards at home, and wearing hip protectors if the risk of falling remains high. Pharmacologic therapy can stabilize or increase bone density in most patients, and reduce fracture risk by about 50%. By selecting high risk patients for bone density testing it is possible to diagnose this disease before the first fracture occurs, and initiate appropriate treatment to reduce the risk of future fractures.</p> http://www.clinicalmolecularallergy.com/content/2/1/9osteoporosismanagementtreatmentbone density testingDXAglucocorticoidfracturerisk
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lewiecki E Michael
spellingShingle Lewiecki E Michael
Management of osteoporosis
Clinical and Molecular Allergy
osteoporosis
management
treatment
bone density testing
DXA
glucocorticoid
fracture
risk
author_facet Lewiecki E Michael
author_sort Lewiecki E Michael
title Management of osteoporosis
title_short Management of osteoporosis
title_full Management of osteoporosis
title_fullStr Management of osteoporosis
title_full_unstemmed Management of osteoporosis
title_sort management of osteoporosis
publisher BMC
series Clinical and Molecular Allergy
issn 1476-7961
publishDate 2004-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Osteoporosis or osteopenia occurs in about 44 million Americans, resulting in 1.5 million fragility fractures per year. The consequences of these fractures include pain, disability, depression, loss of independence, and increased mortality. The burden to the healthcare system, in terms of cost and resources, is tremendous, with an estimated direct annual USA healthcare expenditure of about $17 billion. With longer life expectancy and the aging of the baby-boomer generation, the number of men and women with osteoporosis or low bone density is expected to rise to over 61 million by 2020. Osteoporosis is a silent disease that causes no symptoms until a fracture occurs. Any fragility fracture greatly increases the risk of future fractures. Most patients with osteoporosis are not being diagnosed or treated. Even those with previous fractures, who are at extremely high risk of future fractures, are often not being treated. It is preferable to diagnose osteoporosis by bone density testing of high risk individuals before the first fracture occurs. If osteoporosis or low bone density is identified, evaluation for contributing factors should be considered. Patients on long-term glucocorticoid therapy are at especially high risk for developing osteoporosis, and may sustain fractures at a lower bone density than those not taking glucocorticoids. All patients should be counseled on the importance of regular weight-bearing exercise and adequate daily intake of calcium and vitamin D. Exposure to medications that cause drowsiness or hypotension should be minimized. Non-pharmacologic therapy to reduce the non-skeletal risk factors for fracture should be considered. These include fall prevention through balance training and muscle strengthening, removal of fall hazards at home, and wearing hip protectors if the risk of falling remains high. Pharmacologic therapy can stabilize or increase bone density in most patients, and reduce fracture risk by about 50%. By selecting high risk patients for bone density testing it is possible to diagnose this disease before the first fracture occurs, and initiate appropriate treatment to reduce the risk of future fractures.</p>
topic osteoporosis
management
treatment
bone density testing
DXA
glucocorticoid
fracture
risk
url http://www.clinicalmolecularallergy.com/content/2/1/9
work_keys_str_mv AT lewieckiemichael managementofosteoporosis
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