Below, Dr. Martin Nydick and Dr. David Zackson of the New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical College, discuss the dangers associated with osteoporosis, and the reasons why a proactive treatment approach is a good idea.
Q: How would you define the disease?
DAVID ZACKSON, MD: Osteoporosis is a disease of the bone in which the bone substance is normal but there's just not enough of it to connect, on a microscopic level, in a normal fashion. This makes the bone much more vulnerable to fractures.
For those who get the disease, it manifests itself as loss of height, which is due to compression fractures of the vertebrae, and increased vulnerability to hip fractures in older age.
Q: Twenty-five million Americans have osteoporosis. What does this mean in the world of American healthcare?
MARTIN NYDICK, MD, FACP: This is a very prevalent disorder. It produces about a million and a half fractures each year and it's been estimated that it may be costing our economy up to or more than twenty billion dollars in healthcare costs. These costs are from nursing homes and other services that are necessary to take care of people after they have fractures, which can be very debilitating.
Q: What is the most dangerous outcome of this disease?
DAVID ZACKSON, MD: Hip fractures are the most devastating result of osteoporosis, and result in the most deaths. There's a death rate increase by twenty-five to thirty percent within the first year after having a hip fracture.