骨质疏松性骨折是由骨质疏松引起的吗?脆弱流行病对老龄化世界的影响。

Aging (Milan, Italy) Pub Date : 1998-06-01
L Elffors
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引用次数: 0

摘要

骨质疏松症是老年人骨折的主要危险因素。骨质疏松性骨折(髋部、前臂和椎体)如今严重影响着西方人群,女性的终生风险与心血管疾病的风险相似。死于髋部骨折的风险与乳腺癌的死亡率相当。骨质疏松性骨折与疼痛、致残和社会依赖有关;在美国,每年的费用在70亿到200亿美元之间,髋部骨折所占的比例超过60%。在欧洲的所有医院病床中,骨质疏松症患者占1%至1.5%,预计在未来50年,这一数字将增加一倍以上。椎体骨折似乎主要是由骨质疏松症单独引起的,而髋部骨折则受到年龄依赖性风险因素——虚弱的严重影响。虚弱可能是一种进化现象,也可能是一种共病,尤其是神经系统疾病;它影响骨折风险的原因有几个,但增加跌倒的频率和严重程度是必不可少的。预防跌倒的努力的结果令人沮丧地差。然而,识别风险拥有者,特别是生活在机构中的精神错乱老年人,对于指导主要针对一般健康和骨质疏松症的预防和治疗方案具有重要意义。随着寿命的延长,人类的衰弱程度也会增加。因此,裂缝发生的预测过于保守。到2050年,亚洲每年髋部骨折的发病率可能超过1000万例,而不是迄今预测的320万例,从而将未来与年龄有关的骨折的负担从富裕国家转移到贫穷国家。迫切需要采取有力的全球行动,重新分配资源,重组卫生保健,并制定高风险预防方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are osteoporotic fractures due to osteoporosis? Impacts of a frailty pandemic in an aging world.

Osteoporosis is a major risk factor for fractures in the elderly. Osteoporotic (hip, forearm, and vertebral) fractures today strike hard on Western populations, with a lifetime risk in women similar to the risk for cardiovascular disease. The risk of dying from hip fracture equals breast cancer mortality. Osteoporotic fractures are associated with pain, crippling and social dependency; annual costs in the United States are between $7 to $20 billion, and the contribution from hip fractures is above 60%. Of all hospital beds in Europe, 1 to 1.5% are occupied by osteoporotic patients, a figure expected to more than double during the next fifty years. Whereas vertebral fractures mainly seem to be caused by osteoporosis alone, hip fractures are heavily affected by an age-dependent contributory risk factor, frailty. Frailty might act as an involutionary phenomenon or as comorbidity, particularly neurological; it affects fracture risk along several causal paths, but the increasing frequency and severity of falls are essential. Results of attempts to prevent falls are discouragingly poor. Nevertheless, identification of risk possessors, particularly demented elderly living in institutions, is substantial for directing preventive and treatment programs, mainly acting on general health and on osteoporosis. Frailty of populations increases with longevity. Consequently, projections of fracture occurrence are too conservative. The annual hip fracture incidence in Asia in 2050 might pass 10 million, rather than the hitherto forecasted 3.2 million, thus shifting tomorrow's burden of age-related fractures from the wealthier to the poorer countries. There is an immediate call for vigorous global actions to reallocate resources, to reorganize health care, and to institute high-risk prevention programs.

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