Posts Tagged ‘Osteoporosis’

Hormone Pellets and Osteoporosis: A Case Report

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

A post-menopausal woman had been diagnosed with osteoporosis, and was taking both Fosamax and transdermal hormone replacement therapy, without improvement.  She did not want to continue taking Fosamax out of concern it would damage her jaw or cause swallowing problems, which bisphosphonates are reported to induce.

We stopped the Fosamax and began treatment with subcutaneous hormone pellets, both estrogen and testosterone.  She also took calcium and magnesium, strontium and vitamin D.  She continued to exercise actively on a daily basis.

Over the next four years, repeated bone density studies revealed a remarkable 20% increase in spine bone density.  Osteoporosis had not only disappeared, but her bone density was now above average for her age.

This is the most dramatic example of hormone pellet effects on bone density, but we have seen positive effects in every individual tested.  The pellets are highly effective, and should be considered for every appropriate individual, man or woman, who is at risk for fracture due to low bone density.

Ask us.

Allan Sosin MD

Hillary Clinton’s Fracture May Serve as Osteoporosis Warning

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s unfortunate fall last week  meant a fracture and subsequent surgery Friday to repair the break in her right elbow.

It’s not clear if this was just a nasty fall or if Clinton has any underlying conditions such as osteoporosis that contributed to the fracture. Her spokesperson declined to comment about whether she’d received any such diagnosis after the accident.

Regardless, for many women who are roughly the same age as Clinton this is the kind of accident that often serves as a wake-up call that they should get themselves screened for the bone-weakening condition osteoporosis and its precursor, osteopenia.

Clinton, 61, reportedly fell in the State Department basement as she was on the way to a meeting and heading to her car.

But for about 10 million Americans who have osteoporosis in this country — roughly 8 million of whom are older women — a broken bone is often the first, and only, warning of osteoporosis.

“There are no symptoms until the first break, so you’ll know if you get a simple fracture from a simple fall,” ABC News medical contributor Dr. Marie Savard said this morning on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” And she added that the drop in hormone production that accompanies menopause signals an increased risk for the condition.

“All post-menopausal women are at risk,” Savard said. “The older you are, the more at risk you are.”

But not everyone who is at risk for osteoporosis knows it — possibly due to the incorrect stereotype that only frail, old women experience the condition. As a result, only about 20 percent of women who have a telltale fracture from osteoporosis — most often in the spine, hip or wrist — ever get properly diagnosed and treated.

Click here to read the rest of this story at ABC News.

For more information about integrative treatment of osteoporosis and DXA bone densitometry testing at IPM, Click here.