At Risk: Women and Osteoporosis
A simple low-impact fall causes a wrist fracture, or worse, a hip fracture – is it osteoporosis?
Osteoporosis occurs when there is a loss in bone density which causes the bone to become porous and weak, making it easier to sustain a fracture, mostly in the spine, hip or wrist.
What are potential risk factors for osteoporosis?
• You’re a woman – in fact it’s estimated that one in two women will experience an osteoporosis-related fracture in her lifetime
• There is a history of osteoporosis in your family – if your mother had it your risks for osteoporosis are doubled
• You’re Caucasian or Asian
• You have a small or thin body frame
• You smoke and/or drink heavily
• Your diet is poor and lacking in adequate calcium and Vitamin D
• You have low estrogen levels due to menopause or hysterectomy
• You have taken certain medications such as glucocorticoids, thyroid hormones, anticonvulsants, and/or aluminum-containing antacids
• You’ve suffered from an eating disorder
• Your caffeine intake is high (more than 3 cups of coffee, tea or soda a day)
• You live a sedentary lifestyle with very little exercise or physical activity
According to Norman Kettner, DC, DACBR, chair of the department of radiology at Logan College of Chiropractic,
- "The best treatment for osteoporosis is prevention, and that's equivalent to pediatric care. The simplest tools can prevent osteoporosis – a lifestyle that focuses on nutrition and exercise. Any member of a family who walks down the aisle of the grocery store and picks up Coca-Cola instead of bananas is having an effect on the osteoporosis patients of the future. Lifestyle modifications are so intrinsic to prevention that it's not enough to speak to a parent, or to a teenager. It really has to be leveraged through the whole family."
It’s never too late to prevent or to slow the progression of osteoporosis. Talk to us – we can advise you about things you might be able to do improve bone health, starting with your young children!




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