Title: OSTEOPOROSIS
1OSTEOPOROSIS OSTEOARTHRITIS You CAN Do
Something About It!
2REFERENCE FOR THIS PRESENTATIONGleberzon B,
Killinger LZ. Management considerations for
patients with OA and OP A chiropractic
perspective on whats working. TICC
20029(1)48-60.
3What do we know about OP?
- Now affects 25 million Americans
- 1/3 of women gt 75 are osteoporotic
- 94 of women gt 75 have low bone mass
- 1.5 million OP-related fractures/year
- 700,000 vertebral fx/year 2.5
standard deviations below the mean of a young
adult reference popul.
4So, what can WE do?
5Primary Prevention(Prevent OP from ever
happening)
- Counsel pts about diet and physical activity at
all ages, to maximize bone density in the third
decade of life and slow the rate of bone loss
after that. - Most important factor physical activity!!!!
(National Osteoporosis Foundation and
Clinicians Handbook of Preventive Services
HP2010)
6Secondary Prevention (Early detection)
- 1. Screen all patients OP checklist
- 2. Identify preventable risks
- 3. Get baseline bone mineral density test (Dexa
scan of the hip is the gold standard) - 4. Design a prevention plan suited to patients
risk factors
7BMD testing The DEXA Scan
- Recommended for
- Women with risk factors
- Women who have had a fracture (as an adult)
- Those 65 and older
- Those who are considering OP therapies
- Those who have been on or are starting HRT
8But, what does it all mean?!!
- Normal BD within 1 Standard deviation of a
young healthy adult - Low Bone Mass BD is 1-2.5 SD below mean
- Osteoporosis BD is gt2.5 SD below mean
- Your Z score compares your BD to people your
size, age and gender (careful)
9Tertiary Prevention(Minimizing osteoporosis
impact and disability/slowing progression)
- Employ safe chiro. adjusting strategies
- Fall prevention (IMPORTANT!)
- Keep patients physically active
- Monitor lifestyle and behaviors,
- Encouraging healthy dietary choices
- Supplementation!!
10So, what do we tell our patients?
- Physical activity-Weight bearing (axial loading)
activities are best - Stair climbing
- Walking
- Step aerobics
- Jazzercise
- 3 times a week for 15-20 minutes
- Find a friend to be active with!
11Pumping Iron
- Free weights work wonders!
- Focus on lifting weights with muscles that tug
against the spine (traps, rhomboids, lats, etc) - Start small and work up to more weight
- Can be done while watching TV, etc.
- Lower body? (Jette, Exercise-Its never too
late AJPH)
12Later years Fall prevention
- Strengthen lower body
- Proprioceptive training
- Balance/gait focus
- Home safety checklist
- Modify unsafe surroundings
- Assess and monitor meds
- Regular chiropractic care-IMPORTANT!
13Risks for hip fractures/falls
- older age
- history of fx
- low weight
- caffeine intake (gt2 cups coffee/day)
- alcohol use
- lack of walking/exercise
- vision impairment
- meds that have dizziness or bone loss as a side
effect (steroids, anticonvulsives, BP meds)
14What about nutrition?
- Recommendation 1,200-1,500 mg/day of calcium
(hard to get in diet) - Vitamin D400 - 800 IU/day
- Other bone helpers magnesium, boron, Vit C
(collagen), etc. - Choosing where the calcium deposits through
focused physical activities - Watch out for calcium thieves phosphorus,
caffeine, alcohol, smoking, oxalic acids, etc.
15But what kind of Calcium?
- Calcium citrate-most easily digested (expensive)
22 usable Ca/big pills - Calcium carbonate-needs acidic gastric envir (but
cheaper!) 40 elemental or usable Ca/smaller
pills) - Dairy-yogurt and lowfat milk are the gold
standard calcium sources (all other sources are
viewed in comparison to these)
16The Acid Test
- Calcium supplement tablet should dissolve
completely in a small glass of vinegar in 30
minutes or less - Beware of coated, compressed supplements with a
shelf life of a zillion years! - Dont take more than 500 mg at a time
17Foods for Calcium
- Yogurt/milk
- Ca fortified Juice
- Fortified cereals
- Acidophillus milk
- Fortified soy milk/cheese, etc
- Canned sardines with bones
- Legumes-soak the phylates out first!
18Calcium Interference
- Oxalates and phylates
- High protein diets (esp. meat-based)
- High sodium diets (causes kidneys to dump Ca)
- Wheat bran-phylate
- High iron intake
- High phosphorus intake
- Alcohol, smoking, etc
19Know the medical options...
- HRT, ERT, etc
- Alendronate (bisphosphonate)-Fosomax-decreases
osteoclastic activity, arrests bone loss, may
increase bone density, reduces fractures
(EXPENSIVE 20/pill) - Calcitonin-oral or nasal spray (hormone)
increases bone density in postmenopausal women
20Resources related to OP
- National OP foundation 1(800) 624-BONE or
www.nof.org - info on prevention, patient pamphlets (free!),
bone density tests, research, causes, etc.
21Take Home Messages OP...
- Counsel patients on diet/physical activity
- Screen patients for risks
- Assess bone density and risk factors before
designing intervention - Develop prevention/health promotion strategies
based on patients clinical scenario - Offer good, safe sound chiropractic care
22Osteoarthritis
- Affects about 50 of all people over 65
- Costs 10,000,000 per year in US
- Leading cause of disability in older adults
23Whats working?(Summary of research on OA)
- Physical activity Best strategy ()
- Adjust Bones that are not aligned degenerate
faster (animal models, human studies of the knee) - PT TENS 7 trials () Ultrasound (/-)
- Acupuncture-7 clinical trials ()
- Glucosamine-16 clinical trials (effective and
safe). 1,500 mg/day in 3 doses () - Ginger 1 clinical trial ()
24Medical Interventions
- NSIADS first line of therapy, but
- 0.04 fatality rate
- 2,600 -3,200 deaths annually in US
- 20,000 hospitalizations annually
- 2.74 rate of serious adverse events (GI)
- COX-2 inhibitors interrupts bodys perception of
pain Celebrex, Vioxx - Hypertension, Renal
failure
25Stay up on the literature!!This is a growing
area of investigation in an aging population.
Patients come in asking informed questions!