Osteoporosis: Causes, Complications, and How to Beat It
August 05, 2014American Recall Center, Health and Wellness, Osteoporosis,
The following are the risk factors of Osteporosis:
- cigarette smoking
- early menopause
- excessive use of alcohol
- family history
- female gender
- increasing age
- insufficient intake of calcium
- sedentary lifestyle
- thin, small frame
- white (European descent) or Asian race
Osteoporosis occurs most commonly in the wrist, hip, and vertebral column. The patient may not experience any symptoms until the bones become fragile and a minor injury or movement causes fracture.
According to American Recall Center, "Osteoporosis is a often a factor in hip fractures, which frequently lead to hip replacement surgery."
- One out of every two women and one in four men over 50 will have an osteoporosis-related fracture in their lifetime. The most serious osteoporotic fractures are hip fractures.
- The majority of those who experience hip fractures will require assistance in their day-to-day lives. Twenty percent of seniors who suffer a hip fracture die within a year.
- Due to an aging population and a lack of focus on bone health in the past, the number of hip fractures in the United States could double or triple by the year 2020.
- Nearly 75% of all hip fractures occur in women.
- Osteoporosis accounts for more time spent in the hospital than diseases like diabetes, heart attack and breast cancer among women over 45.
- Hip fractures cost more than $11 billion each year (approximately $37,000 per patient).
I take caffeinated drinks and food products in moderation. Caffeine decreases the ability of the body to absorb calcium.
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