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         Osteoporosis:     more books (100)
  1. Osteoporosis by Leonard Rose, Melinda Rose, 1994-11-01
  2. Osteoporosis

141. Osteoporosis - WomensHealthChannel
osteoporosis is a progressive bone disease that causeslow bone density, bone thinning, and fractures.
http://www.womenshealthchannel.com/osteoporosis/index.shtml
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Osteoporosis is a progressive skeletal disease characterized by low bone density, bone fragility, and susceptibility to hip, spine, and wrist fractures. This condition develops without warning signs. Most people with osteoporosis do not realize they have the disease until a minor fall results in a broken hip, wrist, or vertebra. Bone Remodeling Calcium, phosphate, and collagen are the primary components of bone. Bone tissue is constantly changing. Cells called osteoclasts break down and remove bone tissue in a process called resorption . Osteoblasts form new bone in a process called formation . Hormones (i.e., cortisol, estrogen, progesterone, parathyroid hormone, calcitonin, insulin) regulate the entire sequence, which is called

142. New NOVEL Home Page
Information on UMDNJ study on postmenopausal women and bone loss.
http://www2.umdnj.edu/novelweb/NOVELWebWelcomePage.htm
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143. Osteoporosis: Facts, Disease Prevention And Treatment Strategies
osteoporosis Facts, Disease Prevention and Treatment Strategies. osteoporosisFacts and Statistics. osteoporosis Diseases. osteoporosis
http://www.healingwithnutrition.com/odisease/osteoporosis/osteoporosis.html
HealingWithNutrition.com Home SiteMap Education Products
Osteoporosis
Facts, Disease Prevention and Treatment Strategies
Osteoporosis Facts and Statistics
The body is constantly at work breaking down and rebuilding the bones. Specialized bone cells called osteoblasts pull calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus from the blood to build bone mass. Even with a healthy diet and regular exercise, at approximately 30 years the body will begin to lose more bone than it forms. Usually there are not any obvious symptoms of osteoporosis until a fracture occurs or a vertebrae collapses causing a loss of height and a hump in the back (dowager's hump). Osteoporosis affects more than 20 million people in the U.S. and causes 1.5 million fractures each year. Two hundred and fifty thousand of those 1.5 million fractures are hip fractures and for 300,000 people (20% of fractures) it leads to death. Of the 1.2 million that do not die, 600,000 (40% of the fractures) will require long term nursing care because of complications.

144. FORE
An organization dedicated to serving both the public and medical community through research and education to increase the awareness of osteoporosis.
http://www.fore.org/
Home About FORE Contact FORE Donate document.write("")
Founded in 1990, FORE is a non-profit resource center dedicated to eliminating osteoporosis through our research, education and bone density testing programs. Learn more about FORE
Bone testing schedule

Long Awaited New Treatment for Osteoporosis Approved by the FDA
On November 26, 2002, the FDA approved Forteo® - the first drug on the market that stimulates new bone formation to combat osteoporosis. Most drugs on the market slow down bone loss. Forteo actually builds bone. Its generic name is teriparatide, a synthetic form of a naturally occurring hormone called PTH (parathyroid hormone) that is made in the parathyroid glands. For more information, go to: Medications
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Diagnosing the disease Frequently asked questions Popular Links "Osteoporosis: Guidelines for the Physician" Popular Links FORE's Extensive Research Department Be part of Osteoporosis Day at the ballpark - Get Your May 4 th A's vs. Yankees Tickets Here!

145. : The AMEDEO Literature Guide
GoldenLinks4Doctors.com The Best Medical Websites. osteoporosis. New articles,
http://www.amedeo.com/medicine/ost.htm
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Br J Radiol Clin Exp Rheumatol ... Osteoporos Int 2. E-mail Service Our E-mail service is free of charge. You may select any of the journals listed on the left side, and you will receive every week a list of articles published in your journal subset. To register, fill out the following form and click the "Submit" button.

146. Arthritis Osteoporosis Clinic Research Center Of Central Texas
Internal medicine medical practice located in the Waco, Texas area for arthritis, connective tissue disease, and osteoporosis research. Multilingual, English, Spanish, Italian, Chinese.
http://www.salu.net/aoct/

147. Ask NOAH About: Osteoporosis
Ask NOAH About osteoporosis. What is osteoporosis? The Basics Causes and Risk FactorsChildren and osteoporosis Men and osteoporosis Race and osteoporosis,
http://www.noah-health.org/english/illness/orthop/osteoporosis.html
Ask NOAH About: Osteoporosis
What is Osteoporosis? Prevention and Diagnosis The Basics
Causes and Risk Factors

Children and Osteoporosis
...
Bone Density Testing
Care and Treatment Information Resources The Basics
Complementary/Alternative Methods

Exercise
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Living with Osteoporosis

What is Osteoporosis?
The Basics
Boning Up on Osteoporosis - FDA
How Strong Are Your Bones? - New South Wales Department of Health, Australia
Osteoporosis - American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
Osteoporosis - MEDLINEplus (Interactive Flash Presentation)
Osteoporosis - American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Osteoporosis - American College of Rheumatology
Osteoporosis - National Women's Health Information Center (also in Easy-to-Read version
Osteoporosis - Methodist Health Care System, Houston TX (also in Spanish
Osteoporosis - Arthritis Foundation
Osteoporosis: Fast Facts - National Osteoporosis Foundation
Osteoporosis: What is it? - National Osteoporosis Foundation ...
Osteoporosis in Women - American Academy of Family Physicians
Causes and Risk Factors
Asthma and Bone Health - National Institute on Osteoporosis and Related Bone Disorders
Gastrointestinal Disorders and Bone Health - National Institute on Osteoporosis and Related Bone Disorders
What People with Lupus Need to Know About Osteoporosis - National Institute on Osteoporosis and Related Bone Disorders
Children and Osteoporosis (See also Osteogenesis Imperfecta
Juvenile Osteoporosis - Osteoporosis and Related Bone Diseases National Resource Center
Kids Need More Calcium - Baptist Health Systems of Southern Florida
Osteoporosis Prevention Starts Early - American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons ...
Steroid Induced Osteoporosis in Asthmatic Children - National Jewish Medical and Research Center
Men and Osteoporosis

148. Osteoporosis: The Bone Thief - Age Page - Health Information
Order Print Copies. osteoporosis The Bone Thief. Helen grew up on a farmin the Midwest. All this makes your bones weaker. Who Gets osteoporosis?
http://www.niapublications.org/engagepages/osteo.htm
Order Print Copies Osteoporosis: The Bone Thief Helen grew up on a farm in the Midwest. She drank lots of milk as a child. She also walked a lot, but not after high school. That was when she became a secretary in a local law office. Then she never found time to exercise. Helen went through menopause at age 47. At age 61, she was looking forward to retirement — traveling and working in her garden. But then she slipped on a small rug in her kitchen and broke her hip. After Helen recovered, getting around was a lot more difficult — she needed a cane to walk. Helen had osteoporosis, but she didn’t know it. Osteoporosis is a disease that thins and weakens bones to the point where they break easily — especially bones in the hip, backbone (spine), and wrist. Osteoporosis is called the “silent disease” — you may not notice any changes until a bone breaks. But your bones have been losing strength over many years. Bone is living tissue. To keep bones strong, the body is always breaking down old bone and replacing it with new tissue. As people enter their forties and fifties, more bone is broken down than is replaced. A close look at the inside of bone would show something that looks like a honeycomb. When you have osteoporosis, the spaces in this honeycomb grow larger. The outer shell of your bones also gets thinner. All this makes your bones weaker.

149. MilkSucks.com: Got Osteoporosis?
percent less bone density at menopause than nonsmokers. To learn moreabout dairy foods and osteoporosis, please visit these sites
http://www.milksucks.com/osteo.html
"The dairy folks, ever since the 1920s, have been enormously successful in cultivating an environment within virtually all segments of our society—from research and education to public relations and politics—to have us believing that cow's milk and its products are manna from heaven. ... Make no mistake about it; the dairy industry has been virtually in total control of any and all public health information that ever rises to the level of public scrutiny."
Dr. T. Colin Campbell Why dairy products won't help
you maintain healthy bones Building strong bones and keeping them that
way is easier than you may have thought. The dairy pushers pay dietitians, doctors, and researchers to endorse dairy products, spending more than $300 million annually, just at the national level, to retain a market for their products. The dairy industry provides free teaching materials to schools and pays sports stars, celebrities, and politicians to push an agenda based on profit, not public health. Dr. Walter Willett, veteran nutrition researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health, says that calcium consumption via dairy-product intake "has become like a religious crusade," overshadowing true preventive measures such as physical exercise. To hear the dairy industry tell it, if you consume three glasses of milk daily, your bones will be stronger and you will be able to rest assured that osteoporosis is not in your future. Not so. After examining all the available nutritional studies and evidence, Dr. John McDougall concludes: "The primary cause of osteoporosis is the highprotein diet most Americans consume today. As one leading researcher in this area said, 'eating a high-protein diet is like pouring acid rain on your bones.'" Remarkably enough, both clinical and population studies show that milk-drinkers tend to have more bone breaks than people who consume milk infrequently or not at all. For the dairy industry to lull unsuspecting women and children into complacency by telling them to be sure to drink more milk so that their bones will be strong may make good business sense, but it does the consumer a grave disservice.

150. CBS News | Myths Of Osteoporosis | April 2, 2004 22:08:38
Myths Of osteoporosis NEW YORK, April 3, 2004 (Photo AP / CBS), (CBS) Many peoplethink that osteoporosis is a disease that affects only older women.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/04/02/earlyshow/saturday/main610082.shtml
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Myths Of Osteoporosis
NEW YORK, April 3, 2004
(Photo: AP / CBS)
(CBS) Many people think that osteoporosis is a disease that affects only older women. On The Saturday Early Show , Dr. Mallika Marshall dispelled some myths about the bone disease.
According to the National Osteoporosis Foundation , about 44 million Americans have osteoporosis, defined as low bone mass or thinning of the bones. Osteoporosis puts people at high risk of developing serious fractures. There are concerns that as our population ages, there will be a large increase in the number of people with osteoporosis in the next 15 years.
Marshall says the following are common myths about osteoporosis:
  • Myth: Osteoporosis Is Unavoidable.
    A lot of people think that osteoporosis is an inevitable part of the aging process, but that's not true, according to Marshall. There are some things you can do early on to reduce your chances of getting osteoporosis, such as eating a diet high in calcium and vitamin D, doing weight-bearing exercises and avoiding tobacco and excessive alcohol. Talk to your doctor about getting a bone density test, especially if you're at high risk. People at high risk include those with a family history of osteoporosis, people who don't get enough calcium and vitamin D in their diet, and people who smoke or drink to excess.
  • Myth: Only Older Caucasian Women Get Osteoporosis.
  • 151. MEC Osteoprosis Bone Densitometry Equipment
    Used DEXA bone densitometry machines, BMD spine/hip/finger scanners, ultrasound diagnostic testing equipment to test and scan for osteoporosis and low bone mineral densities.
    http://www.bonedensitometry.com/
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    152. Arthritis Research Campaign | Osteoporosis
    This booklet has been produced for anyone interested in finding outmore about osteoporosis. You may What is osteoporosis? The word
    http://www.arc.org.uk/about_arth/booklets/6028/6028.htm

    scotland + n. ireland

    north
    wales + midlands
    east + southeast
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    south + southwest
    About this booklet
    This booklet has been produced for anyone interested in finding out more about osteoporosis. You may be suffering from the condition, or you may be a friend or relative of someone with osteoporosis. Whatever reason you have for reading this, we hope you will find it useful. We want to explain as much as we can about osteoporosis, what causes it, how it can be prevented and how it can be treated. Unfortunately we cannot hope to answer all your questions, because everyone is different and this is no substitute for individual consultation with a doctor. If you want to find out more after reading this booklet, the addresses at the end of this page may be helpful (see ' Useful addresses
    What is osteoporosis?
    The word 'osteoporosis' literally means 'porous bone'. It is a condition where a person gradually loses bone material so that his or her bones become gradually more fragile. As a result, they are more likely to break.
    What causes osteoporosis?

    153. Osteoporosis
    Information on evaluation, epidemiology, prevention and treatment.
    http://www.doctorovalle.com/
    A Preventable and Treatable Bone Disease
    What is Osteoporosis?
    Osteoporosis is a silent disease in which bones become fragile and more likely to break. Bone loss usually occurs slowly over time. If not prevented or if left untreated, osteoporosis can progress without symptoms until a bone breaks. These broken bones, also known as fractures, occur typically in the hip, spine, and wrist.
    Any bone can be affected, but of special concern are fractures of the hip and spine. A hip fracture almost always requires hospitalization and major surgery. It can impair a person's ability to walk unassisted and may cause prolonged or permanent disability or even death. Spinal or vertebral fractures also have serious consequences, including loss of height, severe back pain, and deformity.
    Millions of Americans are at risk. While women are four times more likely than men to develop the disease, men also suffer from osteoporosis. Indeed, twenty percent of men over the age of fifty have osteoporosis.
    Fortunately, osteoporosis now can be diagnosed before fractures occur by measuring bone density. With early treatment, not only can fractures be prevented, but most patients can also avoid the pain and mobility problems associated with severe osteoporosis.

    154. Truth About Osteoporosis
    osteoporosis A crippling disease that is preventable and reversible. By JohnR. Lee, MD and Virginia Hopkins. TOP. How Aware of osteoporosis Are You?
    http://www.johnleemd.com/trutabos.html
    Osteoporosis
    A crippling disease that is preventable and reversible. By John R. Lee, M.D. and Virginia Hopkins Although cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among American women, osteoporosis is the disease they are most likely to develop as they age. Four out of ten white women in the U.S. will fracture a hip, spine, or forearm due to osteoporosis. As many as five out of ten will develop small fractures in their spine, causing great pain and a shrinking in height. This amounts to 15 to 20 million people affected by a crippling and painful disease that is almost entirely preventable and reversible. Osteoporosis is a gradual decrease in bone mass and density that can begin as early as the teen years. Bone mass should be at its peak in our late 20s or early 30s, but thanks to a poor diet and lack of exercise, many women are already losing bone in their 20s. Bone loss occurs more rapidly in women than in men, especially right around the time of menopause, when an abrupt drop in estrogen and progesterone accelerates bone loss. When you think of your bones you may imagine a dead skeleton, but your bones are living tissue, just like the rest of your body, and they need a good supply of nutrients and regular exercise. New bone is constantly being made, while old bone is being reabsorbed and excreted by the body. Our larger long bones, such as our arm bones and leg bones, are very dense, and they are completely replaced about every 10-12 years. Our less dense bones, such as our spine and the ends of our long bones, are less dense and turn over every 2-3 years. Thus, as you can see, we always have the opportunity to be creating better bone for ourselves.

    155. Wilburn Medical USA
    Offers medical equipment and supplies including several testing devices for bone density to determine osteoporosis.
    http://www.wilburnmedical.com/

    156. How Milk Causes Osteoporosis
    Excessive Calcium Causes osteoporosis. The older you get, the higher your riskof osteoporosis. (58). Athletes Stressfractures. Overweight osteoporosis.
    http://www.4.waisays.com/
    Click here for a summary of this entire website (oder: auf Deutsch Espanol
    Excessive Calcium Causes Osteoporosis
    The older you get, the higher your risk of osteoporosis. Obviously, osteoporosis is about aging. O steoporosis patients originally had very strong bones, like everybody else. Osteoporosis is not about the inability to build strong bones, but about premature degeneration of the bones. What makes the bones degenerate prematurely? Somehow, osteoporotic bones have degenerated more than healthy bones of the same age. In osteoporotic patients, the bones have obviously aged faster . Osteoporosis is about prematurely aged bones. So, the key question is: What accelerates aging of the bones? All our organs age. In all our organs cells constantly reproduce themselves; they wear out and are replaced by new ones. And because the number of times cells can multiply is fixed, organs eventually age. Like the skin eventually becomes wrinkled when there are less cells available to replace the dehydrated old skin-cells. We all know that if we expose our skin to the sun too much, that we will look older sooner. Excessive sun-exposure accelerates he aging of the skin. It does so because the sun burns the outer skin cells, which must be replaced by new cells sooner. And the sooner cells must be replaced, the sooner the moment will come that these cells cannot multiply anymore.

    157. Osteoporosis - A Complete Guide
    From HeliosHealth.com, with expert information, news and discussions. Topics include causes, diagnosis, risk factors, prevention and treatment.
    http://www.helioshealth.com/osteoporosis/

    158. McCue Ultra
    devices for diagnosis of osteoporosis.
    http://www.mccueplc.com/
    The McCUE Energist VPL TM Utilizing state-of-the-art Variable Pulsed Light VPL TM technology the McCUE Energist VPL TM enables optimal treatment protocols for all skin types, ensuring safe, fast and effective treatment. Why is the McCUE Energist Ultra VPL TM different? The Ultra VPL TM delivers a sequence of very rapid short pulses of light energy which, unlike other pulsed light systems, can be varied in time, duration, and delay time between each pulse, in order to create optimal treatment protocols for a wide variety of skin conditions and hair removal. Treatment using the Ultra VPL TM does not involve ablation or physical penetration of the skin and is infinitely more patient friendly with minimal recovery time required. The Ultra VPL TM is one of the most powerful systems available - maximum 51 J/cm The science of beauty The Ultra VPL TM uses a powerful PC to drive its advanced touch screen display. It is surprisingly easy to use even though every treatment parameter can be modified or preset. Treatment options include:
    • Permanent Hair Reduction - VPL TM makes it possible to treat darker skin types
    • VPL TM
    The Ultra VPL TM produces impressive results quickly and safely.

    159. National Bone Health Campaign Bone Health
    For more information on bone health and osteoporosis please visit the Nationalosteoporosis Foundation online at http//www.nof.org/*. osteoporosis.
    http://www.cdc.gov/node.do/id/0900f3ec800072ee
    National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
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    National Bone Health Campaign
    Bone Health
    Bones play many roles in the body. They provide structure, protect organs, anchor muscles, and store calcium. Adequate calcium consumption and weight bearing physical activity build strong bones, optimizes bone mass, and may reduce the risk of osteoporosis later in life. For more information on bone health and osteoporosis please visit the National Osteoporosis Foundation online at http://www.nof.org/

    Peak Bone Mass
    Peak bone mass refers to the genetic potential for bone density. By the age of 20, the average woman has acquired most of her skeletal mass. A large decline in bone mass occurs in older adults, increasing the risk of osteoporosis. For women this occurs around the time of menopause. It is important for young girls to reach their peak bone mass in order to maintain bone health throughout life. A person with high bone mass as a young adult will be more likely to have a higher bone mass later in life. Inadequate calcium consumption and physical activity early on could result in a failure to achieve peak bone mass in adulthood.

    Osteoporosis
    Osteoporosis or "porous bone" is a disease of the skeletal system characterized by low bone mass and deterioration of bone tissue. Osteoporosis leads to an increase risk of bone fractures typically in the wrist, hip, and spine.

    160. Prevention Of Osteoporosis And Fractures - July 1999 - American Academy Of Famil
    Prevention of osteoporosis and Fractures. osteoporosis and low bone density aresignificant risk factors for morbidity and mortality in older adults.
    http://www.aafp.org/afp/990700ap/194.html

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    Prevention of Osteoporosis and Fractures
    PAUL ULLOM-MINNICH, M.D., M.P.H.
    University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita Wichita, Kansas
    O steoporosis and low bone density are significant risk factors for morbidity and mortality in older adults. These conditions are characterized by poor bone strength and are associated with an increased risk of fractures from even slightly traumatic events, such as falls from standing height or lower. Vertebral fractures are the hallmark of osteoporosis, but hip, Colles' and other fractures are also common. Low bone density may be a silent condition until a complication occurs. Increased attention is being given to the early diagnosis and treatment of low bone density as well as the prevention of fractures. Several medications have recently been labeled for the treatment of osteoporosis, but their marginal benefits require careful consideration of their cost. Osteoporosis and Osteopenia As commonly defined, osteoporosis is a condition in which bone mineral density is 2.5 standard deviations below the average bone density in gender-matched young adults. Osteopenia is a less advanced state of low bone mineral density. The risk of fracture increases two to three times for every 10 percent drop in bone density. Patients with low bone mineral density and multiple risk factors for falling are 27 times more likely to sustain an osteoporotic fracture.

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