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Men
Not Getting Needed Osteoporosis Treatments
Even though two
million U.S. males have the disease, and another 12 million are
at risk
The gender gap is alive
and well in the treatment of hip fractures, with men
much less likely than women to receive treatment for osteoporosis
after such a fracture.
"It's been known for the
last couple of years that women were under-treated for osteoporosis.
We suspected that it was the same or worse for men, and that's what
we found," says Gary M. Kiebzak, lead author of an article that
appears in a recent issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine.
Osteoporosis is a disease
in which bone density decreases, making bones more fragile and likely
to break.
According to the study
authors, hip fractures are the most significant type of osteoporosis-related
fracture, accounting for more deaths as a result of osteoporosis,
more disability, and higher medical costs.
Today, two million
American men have osteoporosis, and another 12 million are at risk
for the disease, according to the National Osteoporosis
Foundation.
In the United States,
men account for some 20 percent to 30 percent of all hip fractures,
but no one had done a systematic study to see if they are treated
for osteoporosis after a fracture.
In this study, the researchers
looked at data from 363 patients (110 men and 253 women) with an
average age of about 80 who had been admitted to St. Luke's Episcopal
Hospital in Houston with what appeared to be osteoporosis-related
hip fractures. Questionnaires were mailed to surviving patients
to get information on what treatments, if any, they had been given.
There were 194 surveys returned.
Only 4.5 percent of the
men reported receiving treatment for osteoporosis upon discharge
from the hospital, compared with 27 percent of the women. And at
one- and five-year follow-ups, only 27 percent of the men were taking
treatment for osteoporosis, compared with 71 percent of the women.
Of the patients who were
receiving treatment, 67 percent of men and 32 percent of women were
taking calcium and vitamin D only. At the one- and five-year follow-up
marks, 11 percent of men had had their bone mineral density measured,
compared with 27 percent of women.
The study authors found
that, after discharge, there was an increase in the number of both
men and women who relied on wheelchairs and canes, as well as a
rise in the number of individuals living in institutions.
Treatment
Options For Men Are Different
"A problem that we've
had for men is that we have not had the range of treatment choices
that we have for women, " Kiebzak says. "You wouldn't give a man
estrogen, for example. About the only thing that was available that
was widely used was calcium and vitamin D."
More aggressive medications
such as phosphonates were not being given to men. Nor were men even
getting calcium or vitamin D in many cases, Kiebzak says.
"There was a general lack
of appreciation for the problem of low bone density in men," says
Kiebzak, who is also chief research scientist for the Center for
Orthopedic Research and Education at St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital
and an associate professor of orthopedics at Baylor College of Medicine
in Houston.
One of the reasons for
the low profile of osteoporosis in men is that scientists had lacked
the ability to measure bone density until the early 1990s. The problem
was recognized in women largely because they had more fractures.
The ability to measure
bone density has also given scientists a good definition of osteoporosis.
"We used to define osteoporosis
as the presence of a fragility fracture, that is a fracture that's
caused after a low-energy event," Keibzak explains. In 1994, however,
the World Health Organization provided a definition
based on bone density.
Physicians no longer had
to wait for a person to break a bone before starting treatment for
the disease.
"We aren't necessarily
saying that all these people with hip fractures should immediately
be put on treatment," Kiebzak says. "The point is that these are
people with an average age of 80 who have managed to go through
the healthcare system for all those years and not be treated for
osteoporosis. The time to treat somebody is well before they have
that fracture."
Keeping
Bones Strong
The National Osteoporosis
Foundation offers these tips to help ward off weakening
of the bones:
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Change unhealthy
habits, such as smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, and
inactivity.
-
Ensure a daily calcium
intake of 1,000 milligrams to age 50, and 1,200 milligrams
after age 51.
-
Ensure adequate
vitamin D intake. Normally, the body produces enough vitamin
D from as little as 10 minutes of sun exposure a day. If exposure
to sunlight is inadequate, then vitamin D intake from supplements
should be at least 400 IU daily, but not more than 800 IU
a day.
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Engage in a regular
regimen of weight-bearing exercises, in which bones and muscles
work against gravity. These exercises include walking, jogging,
racquet sports, stair climbing, and team sports. Also, lifting
weights or using resistance machines appears to help preserve
bone density.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization is not
responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
Archives
of Internal Medicine
National
Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, part
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
National
Osteoporosis Foundation
Osteoporosis
and Related Bone Diseases National Resource Center, part of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
World
Health Organization
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November 2002
Men
Much Less Likely Than Women to Receive Treatment for Osteoporosis
Treatment
Options For Men Are Different
Keeping
Bones Strong
The
ABC's of a Bone Density Test
Online
Resources
The
ABC's of a Bone Density Test
What to expect,
how to interpret and when to repeat the screening for osteoporosis
As medical tests go, a
bone mineral density test (BMD) is one of the simplest.
There is no pre-test fasting
or other preparation. No poking or prodding or needles involved.
The technician records your weight and height, and might ask you
to remove clothing with zippers or metal parts, such as your bra.
Then, you simply lie flat
and still on a table during the "gold standard" bone density test,
called a DEXA (dualenergy x-ray absorptiometry) while a machine
that uses small amounts of radiation passes overhead.
"The test tells you how
much bone mineral, the stuff that absorbs the x-ray, is there,"
says Dr. Robert Heaney, professor of medicine at Creighton University
and a scientist at its Osteoporosis Research Center. And it can
give you a good idea of your risk for osteoporosis, the "fragile
bone" disease that can result in painful, costly fractures of the
hip, spine and other areas.
It is all over in 10 minutes
or less.
Then comes the more difficult
part: interpreting the results and figuring out what to do next.
Your results are compared
with those of healthy young persons of your gender and ethnicity
at their peak bone mass, at age 30. And you are also compared to
persons of your gender and ethnicity in your age bracket. The results
may be expressed in a variety of ways: as a percentile, as a percent
or as a standard deviation.
Ask for your results to
be given to you in standard deviation form, experts say.
"The standard deviation
result may be the most useful," says Lynn Chard-Petrinjak, spokeswoman
for the National Osteoporosis Foundation. And probably
the easiest for consumers to interpret.
The World Health
Organization has established categories based on standard
deviations of what is normal and what is not for bone mineral density,
she says, and the National Osteoporosis Foundation
and others use these categories. In medical literature, when treatment
is discussed, it is described for various standard deviations, she
adds.
The result you should
pay the closest attention to is how your bones compare to those
of a healthy young persons of your gender and ethnicity.
Many experts recommend
forgetting about age-matched controls, because many of them, especially
if they are 50-plus, already have reduced bone mass density. Your
fracture risk is more relative when you compare the quality of your
bones to those of younger persons of your own gender and ethnicity.
The result compared to
the younger group is often called the T-score; the result compared
to persons your own age is the Z-score.
So what is normal and
what is not so good? According to the World Health Organization
categories, widely accepted by other experts, a normal bone density
is within one standard deviation (SD) of the young adult mean, which
means plus 1 or minus 1 SD.
Low bone mass is defined
as 1 to 2.5 SD below the young adult, which means an SD of minus
1 to minus 2.5.
Bone density that is 2.5
SD or more below the young adult mean is defined as osteoporosis.
So a result of minus 2.5 SD or greater is osteoporosis.
If you pass the test without
evidence of bone mass loss, your physicians may recommend repeating
the test in four or five years, Uszler says, depending on a variety
of factors such as your age and other risk factors. If your bone
mass is not as good as it should be but you have no evidence of
osteoporosis, he/she may suggest a repeat test in two years or so.
Always consult your physician
for more specific information relating to bone density testing and
your individual medical condition.
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