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Osteoporosis health centre

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Osteoporosis in men

Risk factors for osteoporosis and fractures in men

Even though bone loss in men usually occurs later in life compared with women, men can still be at risk of osteoporosis. By the age of 65, men lose bone mass at the same rate as women. Experts estimate that by 2025, the total number of hip fractures in men will be similar to the current number reported in women. Perhaps because men are generally older than women are when they have a fracture, men are often more severely disabled. As with women, the hips, spine and wrists are the most common sites of fracture. The complications and death caused by hip fractures is three times higher in men than women.

  • Risk factors for bone loss and fractures include:
  • Certain drugs (corticosteroids, anticonvulsants, heparin, excessive thyroid replacement, certain cancer therapies)
  • Chronic disease that affects the kidneys, lungs, stomach, and intestines and alters hormone levels
  • Undiagnosed low levels of the sex hormone testosterone
  • Lifestyle habits
  • Smoking
  • Low calcium intake (see Osteoporosis and Calcium)
  • Inadequate physical exercise
  • Increasing age
  • Heredity
  • Race (Of all men, white males appear to be at greatest risk for osteoporosis. However, men from all ethnic groups develop osteoporosis)

 

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Drink less for strong bones

Heavy drinking is a health risk for many reasons, including the effects on your bones. There is strong evidence from research that chronic heavy alcohol use, especially during adolescence and young adulthood, can dramatically affect bone health and increase the risk of osteoporosis (thinning of the bones) later in life. This is despite tenuous evidence that moderate drinking may protect against osteoporosis. Worse still, the effects of heavy drinking on bone health cannot be reversed, even...

Read the Drink less for strong bones article > >

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WebMD Medical Reference

Medically Reviewed by Dr Mark Fernando on July 19, 2009

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