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If you have osteoporosis, your bones become porous and weak. As they lose strength, they are more likely to break. People with osteoporosis are particularly at risk for breaking these bones:
If you have osteopenia, you also have bone loss, but not as much as with osteoporosis. People with osteopenia are more likely to develop osteoporosis if something isn't done to stop the bone loss.
Cancer and some of its treatments can increase your risk for osteoporosis.
Gender words are used here to talk about anatomy and health risk. Please use this information in a way that works best for you and your doctor as you talk about your care.
Bone is made of calcium and other minerals, which make it hard. Bone density refers to the mineral content of the bones. It is related to how hard and strong bones are. Low bone density is a trait of osteoporosis.
Like other tissues in the body, bone constantly repairs and renews itself. This process is called remodeling. Two kinds of cells carry out remodeling in bone:
A balance between the bone-building osteoblasts and the bone-dissolving osteoclasts keeps bones healthy.
In young people, bones lengthen and increase in density. But after about age 35, your bones start to lose density and strength. Most cases of osteoporosis result from the quicker bone loss. This can happen for any of these reasons:
Osteoporosis is more common in biological females than in biological males. During menopause, the amount of estrogen made in the ovaries greatly slows down. This hormone keeps the bone-dissolving activity of the osteoclasts in check. After menopause, the osteoblasts continue to build bone. But they can't keep up with the speed at which the osteoclasts break it down. If you don't take measures to prevent or slow bone loss, osteoporosis can occur.
In biological males, bone loss generally starts later and usually advances more slowly than it does in biological females. Males tend to have larger and stronger bones than females do. They also don't go through the sudden hormonal changes that occur with menopause. Still, as males age, they do lose bone density. In part, this is because of a natural decrease in testosterone. By age 65 or 70, males and females lose bone mass at similar rates. Calcium absorption, which is needed to keep bones healthy, also decreases in males and females.
Certain cancer treatments can increase the risk for osteoporosis. Some chemotherapy medicines used for breast cancer can cause a loss of bone density. So can certain hormone therapies for breast and prostate cancer. A number of strategies can help prevent and treat osteoporosis. Talk about these options with your health care team.
If you have breast cancer, you may be at higher risk for osteoporosis than other people. Here are some of the reasons why.
Certain chemotherapy treatments used for breast cancer can cause the ovaries to stop making estrogen. That brings on menopause. Early menopause may also result when the ovaries are removed (oophorectomy). Or it can occur if you have radiation to your ovaries. These procedures are done to slow breast cancer growth because estrogen can cause some breast tumors to grow. But the sudden lowering of estrogen levels also causes rapid bone loss.
Some chemotherapy medicines may cause a loss of bone density.
In some breast cancers, the hormones estrogen and progesterone can speed up tumor growth. Hormone therapies are used to prevent this from happening but, at the same time, may speed up bone loss. Hormone therapy may include ovary ablation or taking medicines, such aromatase inhibitors:
Have you had breast cancer and gone through menopause, either naturally or as a result of treatment? If so, you should think about having routine screenings for bone loss. A type of X-ray called the bone mineral density test is safe and noninvasive. It is also called DEXA (dual energy X-ray absorptiometry). It can:
After bone is lost, it can't be completely replaced using current types of treatment. Although it can't be cured, osteoporosis can be slowed down. A number of approaches are available for preventing and treating osteoporosis in females.
Here are some lifestyle approaches you can take to prevent bone loss:
Here are some medical approaches you can use for preventing and treating bone loss:
Talk with your doctor to see if there are other treatments you should think about.