1. Die Osteoporose des Mannes
- Author
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Dieter Felsenberg, Bruno Allolio, Semler J, J. Franke, Dreher R, H P Kruse, Johann D. Ringe, Reinhard Ziegler, G. Leidig-Bruckner, Dambacher M, and R Willvonseder
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Osteoporosis ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Vitamin D and neurology ,Hypercalciuria ,Secondary osteoporosis ,Risk factor ,Densitometry ,business ,Femoral neck - Abstract
BACKGROUND Osteoporotic fractures occur frequently also in men. Epidemiologic data from Germany indicate that more than 900,000 men are affected by osteoporotic fractures. Diagnosis and therapy of male osteoporosis are hampered by a lack of clinical studies. DIAGNOSIS Risk factor analysis, conventional spine X-rays, bone densitometry and a limited number of serum and urine analyses contribute to the diagnosis of osteoporosis and the assessment of future fracture risk. Bone densitometry at the femoral neck is superior to measurements at the lumbar spine because of the high prevalence of degenerative changes at the lumbar spine in elderly men. Major risk factors for osteoporosis are hypogonadism, glucocorticoid therapy, hypercalciuria, gastrointestinal disease, and high alcohol consumption. In individual cases, bone histology or additional biochemical studies are needed to establish the cause of osteoporosis. THERAPY Calcium and vitamin D deficits should be substituted both in prevention and treatment of male osteoporosis. Testosterone replacement therapy is effective in hypogonadism. In primary osteoporosis and in corticosteroid-induced osteoporosis, bisphosphonates (cyclical etidronate, alendronate) and fluorides are therapeutic options. CONCLUSION Important principles in the care of men with osteoporosis are the transfer of knowledge established for postmenopausal osteoporosis and the rigorous search for secondary osteoporosis aiming at treatment of the underlying cause. Large prospective randomized trials aiming at the reduction of fracture rate in male osteoporosis are missing. They are urgently needed.
- Published
- 2000
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