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Osteoporosis

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Showing Osteoporosis Stories 1 through 10 of 27.
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Treating bone and muscle disorders
 Grant creates new Center for Musculoskeletal Biology and Medicine

June 9,
2009 -- A five-year, $3 million grant from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), will allow investigators from more than 50 School of Medicine laboratories to join forces in the fight against musculoskeletal disorders. The grant funds a Core Center for Musculoskeletal Biology and Medicine. Its goal is to better understand causes and potential treatments for muscle and bone disorders.

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Bone density benefit
 Bone drug could help prevent the spread of breast cancer

May 15,
2008 -- Maintaining bone density could be a key to decreasing the spread of cancer in women with locally advanced breast cancer, according to research at the School of Medicine. Bones are common sites for the spread, or metastasis, of breast cancer. Scientists here found that women treated for stage II/III breast cancer who also received a bone strengthening drug were less likely to have breast tumor cells growing in their bones after three months.

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Better bones
 Potential osteoporosis treatment could help patients fortify their bones

Feb. 24,
2008 -- A better drug for osteoporosis wouldn't just preserve patients' old bone structure; it would help fortify their weakened bones with new bone material. Such a drug could be on the horizon because of research at the School of Medicine that has uncovered new information about how to amplify the bone formation process.

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Your Disease Risk
 Siteman Cancer Center unveils web tool for estimating risk of five major diseases

June 28,
2007 --
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| Graham Colditz and the Your Disease Risk Web site |
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A few clicks of the mouse tell visitors to the "Your Disease Risk" Web site their risk for cancer, heart disease, diabetes, stroke and osteoporosis. The Siteman Cancer Center at the School of Medicine and Barnes-Jewish Hospital recently launched this easy-to-use tool, which offers a wealth of information about risk factors and prevention strategies for five prominent diseases affecting millions of Americans.

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Drink your milk
 Dietary calcium is better than supplements at protecting bone health

June 19,
2007 --
Women who get most of their daily calcium from food have healthier bones than women whose calcium comes mainly from supplemental tablets, say researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Surprisingly, this is true even though the supplement takers have higher average calcium intake. More...

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Men need female hormone, too
 Estrogen is important for bone health in men as well as women

May 7,
2007 --
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| DXA scans of a male patient with osteoporosis |
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Although women are four times more likely than men to develop osteoporosis, or porous bone, one in 12 men also suffer from the disease, which can lead to debilitating - or even life-threatening - fractures. In women, low estrogen levels after menopause have been considered an important risk factor for this disorder. Now research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis has shown that low amounts of active estrogen metabolites also can increase the the risk of osteoporosis in men.

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A proactive approach to bone care
 A proactive approach to bone care

March 5,
2007 --
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| Photo by Robert Boston |
| Diemer discusses patient Christine Filcoff's treatment after a bone density test. |
Four years ago, Kathryn Diemer was riding her Irish thoroughbred horse, Patronus, when he suddenly bolted. Diemer fell and broke her back. As a physician, she always had felt empathy toward her patients with osteoporosis, a disease that breaks down tissue in bones. But her fall only heightened her sense of sympathy. Compassion, contagious enthusiasm and training at Washington University with top bone clinicians helped Diemer become a leader in her field.

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Bones need exercise
 Cutting calories without exercise can lead to lowered bone density

Jan. 5,
2007 --
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| Villareal |
Dieting alone is not the best way to lose weight, according to a recent study by associate professor Dennis Villareal. Regular exercise should accompany a healthy diet, he says, but not just to help keep off the pounds. A calorie restricted diet paired with an absence of exercise can lead to decreased bone density. Read more about this research in U.S. News & World Report.

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Why bones weaken
 Medical steroid's baffling connection to osteoporosis becomes clearer

July 27,
2006 --
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| Dark areas (marked with arrows) in the first image show a process of bone renewal and strengthening. The second image shows a reduction in this process after a cortisone injection. |
Scientists are closing in on the solution to a persistent medical puzzle: why do high doses of cortisone, widely prescribed for asthma, rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory and autoimmune conditions, weaken bones? Researchers at the School of Medicine have identified osteoclasts, cells that dismantle old bone, as the essential link between osteoporosis and cortisone.

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Preventing soft bones
 Researchers try to ward off chemotherapy side effects with Vitamin D

July 24,
2006 -- Bone and joint pain can be a painful side effect of some chemotherapy treatments for breast cancer patients. A lack of Vitamin D can cause osteomalacia, a softening of the bones. So researchers are giving patients extra doses of Vitamin D along with their chemotherapy drugs in an attempt to offset the painful side effects.

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