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Osteoporosis health centre
Osteoporosis - What are the symptoms of osteoporosis?
The main symptom of osteoporosis is breaking bones because they have got weak. You can't feel them getting weak and you don't usually look any different on the outside.
You may not know you have osteoporosis until you break a bone.[20]
Osteoporosis is often called the ’silent disease’. That's because most of the time bone loss occurs without any symptoms at all. But when osteoporosis becomes severe, it can lead to fractures and a condition called kyphosis. Kyphosis is spinal compression, sometimes described as the "dowager's hump". Both fractures and kyphosis can be very painful. This pain is usually more severe than the typical aches and pains many people feel as they get older.
Read the Osteoporosis pain article > >
When you break a bone, doctors say you have a fracture. The bone might be snapped right across, like when you break one of the long bones in your arms or legs. Or it might be crushed. This is more likely if you break a bone in your spine.
Lots of people break their bones without having osteoporosis. But this is usually because they have a bad accident, like a big fall or a car crash. If you have osteoporosis, your bones are so weak that you can break them from a gentle bump, lifting something heavy, or even just sneezing.[21]
The symptoms you get depend on which bones get broken. With osteoporosis, you are most likely to break the ones in your spine, hip, and wrist.[22]
Broken bones in your spine
Here are some facts about broken bones in your spine.
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This is the most common fracture caused by osteoporosis. About 1 in 5 white women get a broken bone in their spine during their lifetime.[22]
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You may not feel any pain at all when you break a bone in your spine. Or you may feel a sudden bad pain in your back.
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If you break several bones in your spine, you may get shorter. Your spine may start to bend over too. This is sometimes called a dowager's hump or widow's hump.
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Because you don't always get bad pain, you may confuse fractures of your spine with other diseases like rheumatoid arthritis.[23]
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Most fractures of the spine caused by osteoporosis gradually heal by themselves. But if you think you have fractured your spine (if you get a sudden unexplained back pain, for example) see your doctor. You may need treatment in hospital.
Broken bones in your hip
Here are some facts about broken bones in your hip.
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This is the second most common fracture caused by osteoporosis. About 1 in 6 white women get a broken bone in their hip during their lifetime.[22]
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If you break your hip, you get bad pain straight away. You won't be able to stand on it.
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You will need to stay in hospital for treatment until your hip heals. And you may need an operation.
Broken bones in your wrist
Here are some facts about broken bones in your wrist.
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This is the third most common fracture caused by osteoporosis. About 1 in 7 white women break a bone in their wrist during their lifetime.[22]
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If you break your wrist, you get bad pain straight away. And your wrist or arm may swell up.
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You may need to go to hospital for treatment. And you will have to wear a cast on your wrist until it heals.
Glossary
rheumatoid arthritis
If you have rheumatoid arthritis, your joints get painful, swollen, and stiff. Rheumatoid arthritis is caused by inflammation inside your joints. It happens when your immune system attacks the lining of your joints.
For more terms related to Osteoporosis

