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Query: UNIPROT:P50502 (
Hip
)
7,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
(1) Osteoporosis is one of several recognized causes of bone weakness in elderly women, and accounts for the high incidence of fractures.
Hip
fracture carries the highest rates of morbidity and mortality. (2) Bone density measurement in a given woman is not predictive of her individual risk of fracture. None of the recommendations we examined propose routine screening for osteoporosis by bone density measurement in all postmenopausal women. (3) Women at risk should be identified, so that they can benefit from detection and prevention. Detection is mainly based on clinical evidence. (4) Whatever the age and period of life, prevention of osteoporotic fractures in women is based on adequate supply of
calcium
(at least 1 g/day, mainly in the diet) and vitamin D, and on regular physical exercise and fall prevention. (5) Oestrogen therapy is the first-line drug-based prevention of osteoporotic fractures, despite worries about possible carcinogenicity. (6) Routine hormone replacement therapy for all women, starting at menopause, is not recommended. The decision should be made individually. (7) Before starting treatment, patients should be informed of the need for long-term compliance. (8) Consensus statements recommend hormone replacement therapy as secondary prevention for women having already had osteoporotic fractures, and as primary prevention for women at risk.
...
PMID:Fracture prevention in elderly women: treatment of osteoporosis is one approach, together with physical exercise and fall prevention. 1091 24
Osteoporosis is a major cause of disability and excess mortality in older men and women.
Hip
fracture incidence accelerates approximately 10 years after menopause in women and after age 70 in men. Approximately 1 million Americans suffer fragility fractures each year at a cost of over 14 billion dollars. The disability, mortality, and cost of hip and vertebral fractures are substantial in the rapidly growing, aging population so that prevention of osteoporosis is a major public health concern. BMD is used to make the diagnosis of osteoporosis before incident fracture and predict fracture risk. Recommendations for treatment and prevention of osteoporosis based on BMD score have been published by the World Health Organization and the National Osteoporosis Foundation. In a process that continues throughout life, bone repairs itself by the coupled action of bone resorption followed by bone formation, sometimes referred to as bone turnover. Osteoblasts and osteoclasts are the primary cells involved in bone formation and resorption, respectively. The process of bone turnover is regulated by hormones, such as PIH and local factors such as IL-1 and prostaglandins. Following attainment of peak bone mass at age 25, bone loss begins, accelerates in women at menopause and slows again but continues into advanced years at a rate of 1% to 2% per year, similar to premenopausal bone loss rate. The leading theories of the mechanism of bone loss in older individuals is
calcium
deficiency leading to secondary hyperparathyroidism and sex hormone deficiency. Risk factors such as age, gender, ethnic background, smoking, exercise, and nutrition, and medical conditions associated with osteoporosis should be evaluated and modified when possible to prevent further bone loss. Osteoporosis treatment and prevention include weight-bearing exercise,
calcium
and vitamin D supplementation, estrogen replacement, bisphosphonates, selective estrogen receptor antagonists, and calcitonin. Although there is no currently approved treatment for osteoporosis in men, many of the treatments approved for osteoporosis in women hold promise to be beneficial in men.
...
PMID:Osteoporosis. Pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment in older adults. 1098 13
Low bone mass is a major determinant of bone fragility. With respect to hip fracture risk however, there is limited contribution of BMD to the exponential age-related increase in hip fracture incidence. Large prospective studies have identified a number of additional risk factors for hip fractures independent of bone density. These can be classified as skeletal factors and fall-related factors. Body height and hip axis length are positively correlated with fracture risk. Neuromuscular impairment with low gait speed, difficulty in doing a tandem walk, lower limb dysfunction, body sway or inability to rise from a chair without using one's arms predict future fracture risk. According to the concept of evidence-based medicine (EBM) preventive strategies are now available. Supplementation with
calcium
and vitamin D restores bone quality through suppression of secondary hyperparathyroidism and decreases the risk of falling through improvement of neuromuscular co-ordination and body sway. Treatment with the bisphosphonates alendronate and risedronate increase bone strength and result in a significant reduction of vertebral as well as non-vertebral fractures.
Hip
protectors absorb energy during a fall and reduce hip fracture risk by 56%. Risk factor based patient selection may improve the cost-effectiveness of therapy.
...
PMID:[Secondary prevention of osteoporosis and identification of high risk patients]. 1099 33
DEFINITION AND SOCIOECONOMIC ASPECTS: Osteoporosis is a disease characterized by low bone mass and an increased susceptibility to fractures. It represents an enormous burden for the social security systems in developed countries. In Germany, approximately two million women and 800,000 men suffer from vertebral fractures and estimates for hip fracture incidence are in the range of 70,000-130,000 per year. The resulting costs for hip fractures alone could be calculated to 3-5 billion German marks. THERAPY ACCORDING TO EVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE (EBM): According to Sackett et al. 1996, evidence-based medicine is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients. The practice of evidence-based medicine means integrating individual clinical expertise with the best available external evidence from systematic research. OSTEOPOROSIS THERAPY: The goal of osteoporosis therapy is to prevent fractures and several therapeutic options are available for this disease. With respect to proven fracture benefit, however, the quality of evidence from randomized clinical trials varies substantially among therapies. From systematic research the best external evidence is available for a supplementation with
calcium
and vitamin D and a therapy with the bisphosphonates alendronate or risedronate, as well as the SERM raloxifene. For other therapeutic agents like fluorides, vitamin D metabolites, calcitonin, and etidronate the quality of evidence is much lower. So far, there is no evidence for other pharmaceutical therapies.
Hip
protectors are effective for the prevention of hip fractures.
...
PMID:[Therapy of osteoporosis from the viewpoint of evidence-based medicine]. 1139 91
The burden of non-vertebral fractures is enormous.
Hip
fractures account for nearly 10% of all fractures (and a much greater proportion in the elderly), while wrist fractures may account for up to 23% of all limb fractures. The best available predictors of non-vertebral fracture risk are low BMD and a tendency to fall.
Hip
, forearm, proximal humerus and rib fractures have all been associated with low BMD, though ankle fracture is not strongly related to osteoporosis. Although clinical risk factors identify only about one-third of postmenopausal women at increased risk of osteoporotic fracture, the occurrence of one fracture commonly predicts a second fracture. Guidelines are presented for identifying and treating patients at risk of non-vertebral osteoporotic fractures, especially those with a previous fracture, based on the algorithm recently published by the Royal College of Physicians and the Bone and Tooth Society. Prevention of falls and use of external hip protectors may reduce the occurrence of hip fracture. Treatment options for patients presenting with hip fracture include HRT, bisphosphonates, and
calcium
plus vitamin D, and for Colles' fracture include general measures, HRT, bisphosphonates, or calcitonin plus
calcium
.
...
PMID:Secondary prevention of osteoporosis: when should a non-vertebral fracture be a trigger for action? 1170 88
Osteoporosis therapy has been controversially discussed in the past. In the meantime, several therapeutic options to prevent fractures are available for this disease. With respect to proven fracture benefit, however, the quality of evidence from randomised and controlled clinical trials varies substantially among therapies. From systematic research the best external evidence is available for a supplementation with
calcium
and vitamin D and a therapy with the bisphosphonates alendronate or risedronate, as well as the SERM raloxifene. For other therapeutic agents like fluorides, vitamin D metabolites, calcitonin and etidronate the quality of evidence is much lower. So far, there is no evidence for other pharmaceutical therapies.
Hip
protectors are effective in the prevention of hip fractures.
...
PMID:[Osteoporosis - Evidence based therapy]. 1193 Feb 92
We created three-part unstable intertrochanteric fractures in 6 pairs of aged, osteopenic, human, cadaveric femora. Fractures were reduced and fixed with a Dynamic
Hip
Screw (DHS) (Synthes, Paoli, PA). Two test groups were evaluated: 1. Fixation with DHS, and 2. Fixation with a DHS and
calcium
phosphate bone cement (Norian SRS (Skeletal Repair System)) augmentation of the fracture line and posteromedial calcar region of the proximal femur. Each femur was loaded to 1,650 N (2.5 body weight) for 10,000 cycles to simulate postoperative load transmission across the fracture construct during normal gait. The load was further increased successively by one body weight for another 10,000 cycles until failure. We evaluated fixation by measuring the amount of sliding of the lag screw of the DHS (shortening) and stiffness of the overall fracture construct (stability). SRS cement-augmented specimens had less shortening (1 mm versus 17 mm) and twice the initial construct stiffness compared to control specimens.
...
PMID:Mechanical evaluation of a carbonated apatite cement in the fixation of unstable intertrochanteric fractures. 1207 12
Many studies have been done involving exercise, impact loading, and the effect on BMD. In some of these studies, particularly those involving outpatient activity, compliance and the specific parameters of an individual's impact loading have been difficult to monitor effectively. In this study, an individual, home-use platform was used to record daily, specific, and reproducible impact forces generated during a heel drop exercise. At three centers over 24 months, we conducted a randomized, prospective study of 157 osteoporotic and osteopenic women, aged 60-85 years. A total of 99 patients used the home Osteocare device (OrthoGenesis Incorporated, Northborough, Massachusetts USA) to generate a reproducible and specific daily impact program (active group). Controls (32) performed a similar motion on the unit but without trying to trigger an impact force (sham group), and 26 patients did no prescribed heel drop exercise (control group). All groups had the same
calcium
and vitamin D supplementation.
Hip
DXA was performed at baseline and every 6 months during the entire study duration. Compliance with the 3-5 min routine was high, and patients were able to consistently achieve the specific targeted impact range. Pooled BMD results showed no significant differences between groups in overall BMD measurements. However, a classification model that looked at individual site-specific BMD changes showed that more than 75% of the active group responded (versus 62% for both the sham and the control groups) by maintaining or increasing site-specific hip BMD over the 2-year trial. In fact, at the end of the study, 45% of the actives were gainers versus 12% and 22% in the sham and control groups, respectively. This study suggests that hip BMD may be maintained through a brief, safe, at-home, monitored impact loading program.
...
PMID:Monitored impact loading of the hip: initial testing of a home-use device. 1220 Jun 44
Osteoporosis is a major clinical problem in older women and men. Almost any bone can fracture as a result of the increased bone fragility of osteoporosis. These fractures are associated with higher health care costs, physical disability, impaired quality of life, and increased mortality. Because the incidence of osteoporotic fracture increases with advancing age, measures to diagnose and prevent osteoporosis and its complications assume a major public health concern. BMD is a valuable tool to identify patients at risk for fracture, to make therapeutic decisions, and to monitor therapy. Several other modifiable and nonmodifiable risk factors for osteoporosis have also been identified. Treatment of potentially modifiable risk factors along with exercise and
calcium
and vitamin D supplementation forms an important adjunct to pharmacologic management of osteoporosis. Improved household safety can reduce the risk of falls.
Hip
protectors have been found to be effective in nursing home population. The pharmacologic options include bisphosphonates, HRT, SERMs and calcitonin. PTH had received FDA advisory committee approval. Alendronate has been approved for treatment of osteoporosis in men, and other treatments for men are under evaluation.
...
PMID:Osteoporosis in elderly: prevention and treatment. 1242 71
Osteoporosis in men is now recognized as an increasingly important public health issue. About 30 percent of hip fractures occur in men, and one in eight men older than 50 years will have an osteoporotic fracture. Because of their greater peak bone mass, men usually present with hip, vertebral body, or distal wrist fractures 10 years later than women.
Hip
fractures in men, however, result in a 31 percent mortality rate at one year after fracture versus a rate of 17 percent in women. Major risk factors for osteoporosis in men are glucocorticoid use for longer than six months, osteopenia seen on plain radiographs, a history of nontraumatic fracture, hypogonadism, and advancing age. Bisphosphonates and teriparatide (recombinant parathyhroid hormone) have recently been approved for use in men and should be considered along with supplemental
calcium
and vitamin D. Increased awareness by physicians of risk factors for male osteoporosis--and early diagnosis and treatment--are needed to decrease the morbidity and mortality resulting from osteoporotic fractures.
...
PMID:Osteoporosis in men. 1272 52
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