Pathophysiology Of Osteoporosis: Introduction Of Disease

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Osteoporosis
Athanasios Tsiongas
Chamberlain College of Nursing
NR283: Pathophysiology
Fall Session B, 2015 Osteoporosis
Introduction of Disease Osteoporosis is metabolic bone disorders where bone resorption is increased and bone formation decreases, these bones affected lose calcium where we know strengthens bones, to cause them to become much more brittle and easier to break. This disease happens to postmenopausal women more often than not because of the loss of their hormones (Capolla, 2016).
Etiology
Osteoporosis is most commonly caused by aging according to experts, but it can happen at any time in a person’s life. Most common risk factor for this disease is to be female postmenopausal. This reason being is because females lose …show more content…

To other signs of constant fractures and just breaking bones easier than usual. More signs include loss of height, but some symptoms may not even appear till later, or when you actually fracture a bone.

Complications
Complications associated with osteoporosis include pain and discomfort things can get really bad is if you fall and the bines being very weak can break a hip or worse break a vertebrae in the spine, the right break can cause a person to become paralyzed. These are very scary to think about breaking something by just a simple fall.
Diagnostics
Osteoporosis can be diagnosed by a x-ray, DEXA scan, BMD test. An x-ray can show us if there is a crack or fracture in the bine itself. The DEXA scan is the most common way for doctors to diagnose. This test it measure peoples spines, hips, and total bone density. It is pretty neat thing to have when trying to diagnose this disease. Lastly we have a BMD test, which measures all the bone minerals in the bone. Showing us how much calcium and phosphates are in the bone and if it is normal and if it is abnormal, normal bone density should be Between -1 and -2.5 and if it gets below that you are diagnosed with osteoporosis (Sheu,

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