Kiumarce Kashi MD FACP CCD
Specializing in Internal Medicine and Osteoporosis

Osteoporosis

 

"Did you know a woman's chances of suffering from an osteoporosis related fracture is greater than her risk of cervical, uterine and breast cancer combined?"

 

First the good news—osteoporosis is a condition that is both preventable and treatable if caught in time. However, the bad news is that there is not enough awareness of the opportunities for prevention and treatment of osteoporosis, and too many people—mostly women over the age of 50—suffer significant illness, deformity and sometimes death from this condition.

 

Osteoporosis is a bone disease best described as "porous bones". Bones are living tissue, constantly being rebuilt. With osteoporosis, the rate of bone loss is greater than that of bone rebuilding, causing thin, porous bones that break easily.

 

More than 28 million Americans have osteoporosis or are at high risk of developing it. One in every 2 women and 1 in every 8 men will suffer osteoporosis-related fractures some time in their life. The national cost of osteoporosis and associated fractures is estimated at $10 billion and rising. Osteoporosis causes pain, disability, and loss of independence. However, it is treatable and the amount of bone loss can be prevented.

 

Your bones develop in stages. From birth through adolescence, new bone is built faster than old bone is removed, so bones grow larger and denser. During adolescence, bones grow stronger at an even faster pace than before. Bone mass peaks between ages 20 and 30, then bone loss can outpace formation. After menopause in women, bone loss speeds up because of a loss in estrogen, a hormone that helps protect bones.

 

The risk for osteoporosis increases if too little bone is formed during youth, or too much is lost later in life, or both. Size and quality of bone may be genetically determined, but other factors also influence bonehealth. A family history of osteoporosis or bone fractures, a lifelong low-calcium diet, Caucasian or Asian heritage, lack of exercise, low body weight relative to your height, smoking, drinking excess alcohol, lack of menstruation, and taking certain medications are all risk factors for osteoporosis.

 

While you can't control all your risk factors, you can make lifestyle choices that will decrease your risk for developing osteoporosis. These include: eating a balanced diet rich in calcium, regularly doing weight-bearing activities, avoiding excessive alcohol, and not smoking. Building healthy bones at any age helps prevent osteoporosis later in life.

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