Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: brittle + can + bones  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Healthy Diet And Exercise Key To Strong Bones, Royal Australian ...
Medical News Today (press release), UK - Aug 4, 2008
"Osteoporosis is a condition in which the bones become fragile and brittle, leading to a higher risk of fractures. It occurs when bones lose minerals more ...
Anorexia athletica, the price that many female athletes pay for gold
Times Online, UK - Aug 3, 2008
Her skeleton is weakened by osteopenia (a precursor to the brittle-bone disease osteoporosis, which usually affects post-menopausal women) and, ...

Telegraph.co.uk
Fluoride could be added to 40pc of water
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Aug 4, 2008
Anti-fluoride groups claim that the chemical has been linked to cases of bone cancer and brittle bone disease and that it can even damage the teeth it is ...
Health chiefs are planning to add fluoride to half of our water supply Daily Mail
all 8 news articles »
From gangster to Jedi: A look at Samuel L. Jackson's film roles
MLive.com, MI -
("Episode III") Role: Elijah Prince, aka "Mr. Glass," the evil man with brittle bones destined to be a super-villain. in M. Night Shyamalan's ...
'Women must have brittle bone drug', campaigners beg Health Secretary
This is London, UK - Jul 31, 2008
Excellence, could lead to an epidemic of broken bones among older women. Osteoporosis can affect anyone because of natural bone loss caused by ageing. ...
Do Antidepressants Make Bones Brittle?
Washington Post, United States - Jul 11, 2008
The researchers want to determine if there's a genetic predilection for osteoporosis, the brittle bone disease that can lead to fractures, that's induced by ...
Brittle Bones Can Affect Older Men As Well
Online - International News Network, Pakistan - Jul 12, 2008
But when a fracture occurs in the elderly, brittle bones can quickly become a life-or-death concern. "There are a number of reasons people can die after ...
?Asians at high risk of deadly bone disease?
Daily Times, Pakistan - Aug 2, 2008
The disease, which afflicts women more than men, is characterised by decrease in bone mass, causing bones to become brittle and break easily. ...

TheMedGuru
Study: Improve Your Kids' Bones By Including Enough Calcium
TheMedGuru, India - Aug 2, 2008
A new American study found that by increasing the calcium content in kids' diet at any point of time can significantly increase their bone density. ...

WhatsOnStage.com
Review Round-up: Naked Ambition at the National?
WhatsOnStage.com, UK - Aug 4, 2008
Celia Cain is a wholly plausible fictional creation made sympathetic flesh by Lesley Manville in a performance of beautifully brittle assurance. ...
Source: Google News

Brittle bones--fragile molecules: disorders of collagen gene structure and expression.
PH Byers - Trends Genet, 1990 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... protein in most tissues, usually produce brittle bones. The consequences of even
apparently minor mutations--single base substitutions--can range from lethal ...

Biomechanics of Bone: Determinants of Skeletal Fragility and Bone Quality -
CH Turner - Osteoporosis International, 2002 - Springer
... Osteope- trosis causes stiff, brittle bones. Osteopetrotic ... failure. However,
osteomalacic bones can deform considerably before the fracture. ...

Type V Osteogenesis Imperfecta: A New Form of Brittle Bone Disease -
FH GLORIEUX, F RAUCH, H PLOTKIN, L WARD, R TRAVERS … - Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, 2000 - Am Soc Bone Min Res
... V Osteogenesis Imperfecta: A New Form of Brittle Bone Disease. ... OI type IV but who
can be distinguished ... to severe increased fragility of long bones and vertebral ...

Osteogenesis imperfecta, non-accidental injury, and temporary brittle bone disease. -
R Smith - Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1995 - pt.wkhealth.com
... imperfecta. Likewise skull fractures can occur in osteogenesis imperfecta.
It ... inexplicable. (3) Temporary brittle bone disease. Paterson ...

Temporary Brittle Bone Disease: Association with Decreased Fetal Movement and Osteopenia -
ME Miller - Calcified Tissue International, 1999 - Springer
... Temporary brittle bone dis- ease is a recently described ... characterized by a tran-
sient bone weakness in ... multiple, unexplained fractures that can be confused ...

Osteogenesis imperfecta type VI: a form of brittle bone disease with a mineralization defect -
FH Glorieux, LM Ward, F Rauch, L Lalic, PJ … - J Bone Miner Res, 2002 - Am Soc Bone Min Res
... PJ, Lalic L, Glorieux DF, Fassier F, Bishop N 2000 Osteogenesis imperfecta type
V: A new form of brittle bone disease ... Bone 26:581589 ... Can J Public Health 76:191194 ...

Non-accidental injury or brittle bones -
S Chapman, CM Hall - Pediatric Radiology, 1997 - Springer
... has been invoked as an explanation for ?tempo- rary brittle bones? [26, 27]. ... by
fractures (approximately 20 in the world literature) we can conclude that ...

Osteoporosis and Cardiovascular Disease: Brittle Bones and Boned Arteries, Is There a Link?. -
SI McFarlane, R Muniyappa, JJ Shin, G Bahtiyar, JR … - Endocrine, 2004 - pt.wkhealth.com
... Brittle Bones and Boned Arteries, Is There a Link? ... and osteoblastogenesis in
osteoporosis resulting in enhanced bone resorption can be applied to ...

Crack growth resistance in cortical bone: Concept of microcrack toughening -
D Vashishth, JC Behiri, W Bonfield - Journal of Biomechanics, 1997 - Elsevier
... but for consistency with the previous bone literature the ... on the conditions (plane
strain or stress), can be used ... Brittle materials demonstrate a flat R-curve. ...

Syndromes with congenital brittle bones -
H Plotkin - feedback, 2005 - biomedcentral.com
... descriptive names. Some of these syndromes can actually be considered congenital
forms of brittle bones resembling OI (SROI). Discussion. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Brittle Bones Can Affect Older Men As Well

 SUNDAY, July 10 (HealthDay News) -- Everyone knows that women need to fend off osteoporosis as they age. But what is less well-known is that 30 percent of elderly men who suffer a hip fracture will die within a year of that fracture -- double the rate for older female patients.

But despite this increased risk, experts say many men view brittle bones as a "woman's problem."

 
Too many doctors may also share that view: One recent U.S. study, published in the June issue of the journal Osteoporosis International, "validated what we thought -- that men who have fractures are woefully undertreated. Just one in every six men who had a spine or hip fracture was treated with osteoporosis medications" to strengthen ailing bones, said Dr. Thomas J. Weber, an assistant professor of medicine at Duke University Medical Center.
 
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According to the same study, just 1.1 percent of men brought to the hospital for a serious fracture received a bone density test to evaluate their overall risk.

"Now, doctors wouldn't hesitate to do that for a woman, but it seems we just don't think of it in terms of men," Weber said.

It's true that men start out with denser, healthier bones than women.

"Women have less bone to begin with, and then they get a big hit at menopause," said Dr. Joseph Lane, chief of the metabolic bone disease service at the Weill Cornell Medical College's Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City.

"The overall rate of bone loss for men and women is the same, but because men start higher they don't get into trouble as quickly -- osteoporosis isn't an issue for men until 70 and beyond," he said.

But when a fracture occurs in the elderly, brittle bones can quickly become a life-or-death concern.

"There are a number of reasons people can die after fracture," Weber said. "They may have underlying cardiovascular disease that leads to congestive heart failure. They may develop infection and there's a suggestion, based on some evidence, that perhaps in 25 percent of male patients death is related to the consequences of the hip fracture itself."

While menopause is a major cause of bone deterioration in women, factors such as smoking, alcohol consumption and the use of certain medicines increase fracture risks for men, Lane said. The gradual age-related decline in circulating testosterone is another factor. "A young guy has a testosterone value of about 1,000 and older men are down to about 300," he said.

All of these risk factors are preventable, either through quitting smoking and heavy drinking, or via pharmaceutical means, said Lane, who is also a spokesman for the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.

Then there's diet and exercise.

"In general, men over the age of 50 should be getting 1,200 mg of calcium a day from diet, or diet and supplements combined," Weber said. Lane advises men to use calcium citrate -- not bicarbonate -- supplements, because the bicarbonate formulation raises risks for kidney stones.

The current recommended daily allowance for another bone-strengthener, vitamin D, is 400 International Units (IU) per day for older men, but Weber said that level is currently under review and will no doubt be revised.

"I think maybe upwards of 800 to 1,000 IU can be safely recommended for men," he said. Many foods, including milk, come fortified with vitamin D (check the label) and cod liver oil capsules are particularly high in the nutrient.

Skin also manufactures vitamin D under strong sunlight. "It has to do with the sun's angle, though, so go out there between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. rather than taking a walk in the early morning," Weber said.

As for exercise, its benefits are more about balance than bones, according to Weber. "Exercise's effects on the skeleton tend to be fairly modest," he explained. "When we prescribe exercise for older people we're doing it not only to help bone density but to increase strength and reduce their risk of falls."

Lane agreed. "You need two things for a fracture: bad bones and a fall. There's an easy way to tell if you're at high risk for falling: try standing on one leg for 12 seconds. If you can't do that, then by definition you're an unsteady individual who needs fall protection" such as sturdy shoes, a cane or walker, he said.

But failing balance can be restored, and one of the world's oldest interventions remains among the most effective.

"The most successful method is Tai Chi," Lane said. "All of the YMCAs in New York now teach Tai Chi, and we send all the people who fail the one-leg test to the Y to learn it."

More information

Bone up on bone loss at the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.

 

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