banner ad

Osteoporosis- Jinx that never breaks

Osteoporosis is a chronic disease that causes deprivation of the calcium and phosphate salts.  The bones become brittle gradually less dense and your bones lose denseness gets brittle and will break easily. This complaint is common in women after their menopausal age. It can occur in men too but occurrence is less common. Your bones after your mid- thirties begin to loose calcium and other main salts.

osteoporosis2 thumb Osteoporosis  Jinx that never breaks

As women draw near age 45 and men reaching the age of 60, they start drawing less calcium from their food so it is of great importance to consume a healthy diet to keep up fit bones. All bones can be affected by osteoporosis, though this status generally evolves in the bones of the hips, the pelvis, wrists and the vertebral column (spine or backbone).

The accurate cause of the loss of bone mass in aged adult is unnamed, but amongst the factors related with osteoporosis in postmenopausal women are ancestral traits, the sum of bone mass at skeletal maturity, exercise, nutrition and hormonal influences, as in the loss of ovarian oestrogen yield. It looks as people age into their seventies and eighties, osteoporosis becomes a common disease.

Thin women and women who smoke are more prone to osteoporosis as their bones are less dense prior to climacteric than the bones of heavier non-smoking women. Aged men are less prone to this precondition as they have denser bones (about 30 percent denser) than women, and their testosterone levels persist until they accomplish the age of 80 years.

Osteoporosis might not be related with any clinical manifestation unless a bone breaks. Pain and disfiguration commonly attach to a break. An individual might develop weakness and collapse of the vertebral bodies and might contract in height or develop a curve of the spine or a humpback. Prevention of osteoporosis commences in childhood and the teen years with the commencement of lifelong habits of good nutrition and physical exercise to strengthen.

Related current health articles

Filed Under: Bones, Joints and MusclesWomen's health

Tags:

About the Author: Dr.kut is a Physician and an Active Medical/Health Blogger and Loves to blog about current health events and current health articles.

RSSComments (0)

Trackback URL

Leave a Reply

*