{"id":3606,"date":"2015-11-23T17:49:38","date_gmt":"2015-11-23T17:49:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/food4healthybones.com\/?p=3606"},"modified":"2022-01-01T02:32:37","modified_gmt":"2022-01-01T07:32:37","slug":"fractures-caused-by-osteoporosis-drugs-is-anyone-listening","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/food4healthybones.com\/blog\/fractures-caused-by-osteoporosis-drugs-is-anyone-listening\/","title":{"rendered":"Sticks and Stones - and Fosamax, May Break My Bones"},"content":{"rendered":"

My friend and colleague, Dr. Lani Simpson - Author:  Dr. Lani's No Nonsense Bone Health Guide, is my guest blogger this month.<\/p>\n

Fractures:  Is Anyone Listening?
\n<\/strong><\/h3>\n

There are many types of fractures; a stress fracture is one of them. A stress fracture can be a normal response to repeated stress upon normal bone. A good example of this is a stress fracture that occurs when an athlete who is preparing seven days a week for a triathlon or a backpacker carrying a very heavy backpack and walking for miles. These stress fractures are most commonly seen in the bones of the feet and ankles. However, stress fractures can occur almost anywhere <\/em><\/strong>in the body and they can be normal or abnormal, which can indicate underlying bone pathology.<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

There are two types of stress fractures<\/p>\n

    \n
  1. Fatigue fracture, which results from abnormal stresses on normal bone<\/em>.<\/li>\n
  2. Insufficiency fracture, which results from normal stresses on abnormal bone.
    \n<\/em><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n

    Other terms for insufficiency fracture can include low force or non-traumatic fracture or fragility fracture. Reports from radiologists tend to use insufficiency fracture.<\/p>\n

    INSUFFICIENCY FRACTURES
    \n<\/strong><\/p>\n

    Insufficiency fractures (IFs) can occur with many bone diseases and conditions that weaken bone tissue. There is growing evidence that IFs are linked to long-term use of the most popular osteoporosis medications.\"\"<\/p>\n

    The focus of this article is insufficiency fractures<\/strong> that can occur following long-term use of the most commonly prescribed osteoporosis medications, Bisphosphonates (BP)<\/strong>. This drug category includes: Fosamax (Alendronate), Actonel (Residronate), Boniva (Ibandronate), Reclast (Zoledronic acid) and many others. Another drug, Prolia (Denosumab) can also result in these fractures if used for an extended period of time.<\/p>\n

    Drugs to treat osteoporosis are classified as anti-resorptive (suppress bone breakdown) or anabolic (bone building). Currently there is only one FDA-approved medication in the category of anabolic and that is Forteo. All the rest are anti-resorptive and suppress bone break down. Most people treated for osteoporosis are taking a BP<\/strong>. Prolia is another anti-resorptive that can result in poor bone quality over time.<\/p>\n

    An insufficiency fracture indicates that a bone or bones are excessively weak. This could be caused from breast cancer or prostate cancer that has metastasized to bone or severe osteoporosis, or some other form of pathology that has weakened bone tissue.<\/p>\n

    Before we go on, it is important to understand how our bones stay healthy throughout our lifetime. This amazing process is called bone remodeling<\/strong>. The following explanation is from my book: Dr. Lani\u2019s No-nonsense Bone Health Guide.
    \n<\/em><\/p>\n

    \u201cLike a never-ending New Year\u2019s celebration, your bones undergo a process of throwing out the old and welcoming the new right below the surface of your skin and muscles. This process\u2014called \u201cbone remodeling\u201d\u2014is a continuous cycle that recurs throughout your lifetime. It is designed to keep your skeletal structure healthy and supple by getting rid of old bone and laying down new bone. As we age, the remodeling becomes less effective, so that by the time we are in our eighties and nineties our bone is more brittle. It is possible, however, to slow down this particular aging process by eating healthy food and exercising.<\/p>\n

    Bone remodeling primarily depends on the work of two types of bone cells: osteoclasts and osteoblasts. The job of osteoclasts is to remove old bone (through a process called resorption), and the job of osteoblasts is to lay down new bone\u201d<\/p>\n

    Here is a simple way to remember which type of bone cell does what:<\/p>\n