Osteoporosis Guidelines-What Your Doctor Should Be
Doing
Osteoporosis guidelines for
testing are important because this is a “silent”
disease. That is, you wouldn’t know you had it until you
break a bone. While bone density
tests allow doctors to detect it, there are no symptoms short
of a broken bone or sharp pain. That’s why there are
osteoporosis guidelines.
These osteoporosis guidelines are for doctors. However, if
you are a patient, knowing what your doctor is supposed to do
will help you know whether your physician is doing everything
he or she can do to keep you from potentially deathly falls
caused by osteoporosis.
Osteoporosis guidelines are for physicians who are advising
patients 50 years of age or older, in particular
post-menopausal women. They are supposed to advise their
patients about the risk for osteoporosis and recommend a bone
density test, if appropriate. In addition, they should evaluate
patients for secondary causes of the disease.
Doctors following the osteoporosis guidelines will ensure
that their patients are getting 1200 mg. of calcium a day and
recommend supplements if that amount is not part of the
patient’s daily diet. Patients should also get 800 mg. of
Vitamin D per day, including supplements if necessary.
They should suggest that their patients engage in
weight-bearing and muscle strengthening exercises. This
decreases the risk of fractures from falls.
Doctors are supposed to discuss the risks of cigarette
smoking and excessive alcohol use vis a vis osteoporosis
risk.
In addition, there are several osteoporosis guidelines
related to bone density testing. All women over 65 and all men
over 70 should get a baseline bone density test. Additionally,
patients aged 50 to 70 who have an osteoporosis risk profile
should be tested. A schedule for future testing should also be
established, preferably every two years.
Osteoporosis guidelines say that doctors should begin
treating patients with hip or vertebral (clinical or
morphometric) fractures. After appropriate evaluation, they
should also begin treatment in patients in whom dual-energy
x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) shows BMD T-scores of less than –2.5
at the femoral neck, total hip, or spine.
Additionally, they should begin treatment in post menopausal
women and in men 50 years and older who have low bone mass
which is also known as osteopenia. That means those with a
T-score of –1 to –2.5 at the femoral neck, total hip, or spine
as well as those who have 10-year hip fracture probability of
3% or more or a 10-year all major osteoporosis–related fracture
probability of 20% or more based on the US-adapted WHO absolute
fracture risk model.
Currently, the Food and Drug Administration has approved
pisphosphonates, calcitonin, estrogens, hormone therapy,
raloxifene, and PTH 1-34 for treatment of osteoporosis. These
drugs should be discussed with patients, as appropriate.
Osteoporosis treatment is cost-effective in patients with
fragility fractures or osteoporosis, in older individuals at
average risk, and in younger persons with additional clinical
risk factors for fracture. So, there is no excuse for sloppy
diagnosis. If you are a patient over 50 years of age, make sure
that your doctor is following these osteoporosis
guidelines.
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