DNYUZ
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Television
    • Theater
    • Gaming
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Why Brittle Bones Aren’t Just a Woman’s Problem

October 4, 2025
in News
Why Brittle Bones Aren’t Just a Woman’s Problem
494
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Ronald Klein was biking around his neighborhood in North Wales, Pa., in 2006 and tried to jump a curb. “But I was going too slow — I didn’t have enough momentum,” he recalled.

As the bike toppled, he thrust out his left arm to break the fall. It didn’t seem like a serious accident, yet “I couldn’t get up.”

At the emergency room, X-rays showed that he had fractured both his hip, which required surgical repair, and his shoulder. Dr. Klein, a dentist, went back to work in three weeks, using a cane. After about six months and plenty of physical therapy, he felt fine.

But he wondered about the damage the fall had caused. “A 52-year-old is not supposed to break a hip and a shoulder,” he said. At a follow-up visit with his orthopedist, “I said, ‘Maybe I should have a bone density scan.’”

As he suspected, the test showed that he had developed osteoporosis, a progressive condition, increasing sharply with age, that thins and weakens bones and can lead to serious fractures. Dr. Klein immediately began a drug regimen and, now 70, remains on one.

Osteoporosis occurs so much more commonly in women, for whom medical guidelines recommend universal screening after age 65, that a man who was not a health care professional might not have thought about a scan. The orthopedist didn’t raise the prospect.

But about one in five men over age 50 will suffer an osteoporotic fracture in his remaining years, and among older adults, about a quarter of hip fractures occur in men.

When they do, “men have worse outcomes,” said Dr. Cathleen Colon-Emeric, a geriatrician at the Durham VA Health Care System and Duke University and the lead author of a recent study of osteoporosis treatment in male veterans.

“Men don’t do as well in recovery as women,” she said, with higher rates of death (25 percent to 30 percent within a year), disability and institutionalization. “A 50-year-old man is more likely to die from the complications of a major osteoporotic fracture than from prostate cancer,” she said.

(What’s “major”? Fractures of the wrist, hip, femur, humerus, pelvis or vertebra.)

In her study of 3,000 veterans ages 65 to 85, conducted at Veterans Affairs health centers in North Carolina and Virginia, only 2 percent of those assigned to the control group had undergone bone-density screening.

“Shockingly low,” said Dr. Douglas Bauer, a clinical epidemiologist and osteoporosis researcher at the University of California, San Francisco, who published an accompanying commentary in JAMA Internal Medicine. “Abysmal. And that’s at the V.A., where it’s paid for by the government.”

But establishing a bone health service — overseen by a nurse who entered orders, sent frequent appointment reminders and explained results — led to dramatic changes in the intervention group, who had at least one risk factor for the condition.

Forty-nine percent of them said yes to a scan. Half of those tested had osteoporosis or a forerunner condition, osteopenia. Where appropriate, most of them began medications to preserve or rebuild their bones.

“We were pleasantly surprised that so many agreed to be screened and were willing to initiate treatment,” Dr. Colon-Emeric said.

After 18 months, bone density had increased modestly for those in the intervention group, who were more likely to stick to their drug regimens than osteoporosis patients of either sex in real-world conditions.

The study didn’t continue long enough to determine whether bone density increased further or fractures declined, but the researchers plan a secondary analysis to track that.

The results revive a longtime question: Given how life-altering, even deadly, such fractures can be, and the availability of effective drugs to slow or reverse bone loss, should older men be screened for osteoporosis, as women are? If so, which men and when?

Such issues mattered less when life spans were shorter, Dr. Bauer explained. Men have bigger and thicker bones and tend to develop osteoporosis five to 10 years later than women do. “Until recently, those men died of heart disease and smoking” before osteoporosis could harm them, he said.

“Now, men routinely live into their 70s and 80s, so they have fractures,” he added. By then, they have also accumulated other chronic conditions that impair their ability to recover.

With osteoporosis testing and treatment, “a man could see a clear-cut improvement in mortality and, more importantly, his quality of life,” Dr. Bauer said.

Both patients and many doctors still tend to regard osteoporosis as a women’s disease, however. “There’s a bit of a Superman idea,” said Dr. Eric Orwoll, an endocrinologist and osteoporosis researcher at Oregon Health and Science University.

“Men would like to believe they’re indestructible, so a fracture doesn’t have the implication that it should,” he added.

One patient, for example, for years resisted entreaties from his wife, a nurse, to “see someone” about his visibly rounded upper back.

Bob Grossman, 74, a retired public-school teacher in Portland, blamed poor posture instead and told himself to straighten up. “I thought, ‘It can’t be osteoporosis — I’m a guy,’” he said. But it was.

Another obstacle to screening: “Clinical practice guidelines are all over the place,” Dr. Colon-Emeric said.

Professional associations like the Endocrine Society and the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research recommend that men over 50 who have a risk factor, and all men over 70, should seek screening.

But the American College of Physicians and the United S. Preventive Services Task Force have deemed the evidence for screening of men “insufficient.” Clinical trials have found that osteoporosis drugs increase bone density in men, as in women, but most male studies have been too small or lacked enough follow-up to show whether fractures also declined.

The task force’s position means that Medicare and many private insurers generally won’t cover screening for men who haven’t had a fracture, though they will cover care for men diagnosed with osteoporosis.

“Things have been stalled for decades,” Dr. Orwoll said.

So it may fall to older male patients themselves to ask their doctors about a DXA (pronounced DECKS-ah) scan, widely available at $100 to $300 out of pocket. Otherwise, because osteoporosis is typically asymptomatic, men (and women, who are also undertested and undertreated) don’t know their bones have deteriorated until one breaks.

“If you had a fracture after age 50, you should have a bone scan — that’s one of the key indicators,” Dr. Orwoll advised.

Other risk factors: falls, a family history of hip fractures, and a fairly long list of other health conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, hyperthyroidism and Parkinson’s disease. Smoking and excessive alcohol use increase the odds of osteoporosis as well.

“A number of medications also do a number on your bone density,” Dr. Colon-Emeric added, notably steroids and prostate cancer drugs.

When a scan reveals osteoporosis, depending on its severity, doctors may prescribe oral medications like Fosamax or Actonel, intravenous formulations like Reclast, daily self-injections of Forteo or Tymlos, or twice-annual injections of Prolia.

Lifestyle changes like exercising, taking calcium and vitamin D supplements, stopping smoking and drinking only moderately will help, but aren’t sufficient to stop or reverse bone loss, Dr. Colon-Emeric said.

Although guidelines don’t universally recommend it, at least not yet, she would like to see all men over 70 be screened, because the odds of disability after hip fractures are so high — two-thirds of older people will not regain their prior mobility, she noted — and the medications that treat it are effective and often inexpensive.

But informing patients and health care professionals that osteoporosis threatens men, too, has progressed “at a snail’s pace,” Dr. Orwoll said.

Dr. Klein remembers attending a seminar to instruct patients like him in using the drug Forteo. “I was the only male there,” he said.

The New Old Age is produced through a partnership with KFF Health News.

The post Why Brittle Bones Aren’t Just a Woman’s Problem appeared first on New York Times.

Share198Tweet124Share
Middle East updates: Trump won’t tolerate peace deal delay
News

Netanyahu hopes Gaza hostages return home in coming days

by Deutsche Welle
October 4, 2025

After Hamas responded positively to US President Donald Trump’s , DW asked displaced Palestinians in Deir Al Balah in central ...

Read more
Music

How new generations are learning the piano

October 4, 2025
News

Zurich Winners: Slovak Oscar Entry ‘Father’ Wins Golden Eye For Best Film

October 4, 2025
Food

Three common fruits can help Americans fall asleep faster and sleep better

October 4, 2025
News

NFL officials won’t be ‘able to sleep at night’ after picking Bad Bunny for Super Bowl halftime show, DHS chief Kristi Noem says

October 4, 2025
Journalists work in dire conditions to tell Gaza’s story, knowing that could make them targets

Journalists work in dire conditions to tell Gaza’s story, knowing that could make them targets

October 4, 2025
Populist billionaire Andrej Babis’s party set to win Czech election

Populist billionaire Andrej Babis’s party set to win Czech election

October 4, 2025
Bessent will meet Chinese officials in Spain for trade and TikTok talks

Georgia man indicted after fishing tournament boat crash killed 3 in Alabama

October 4, 2025

Copyright © 2025.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2025.