By Seema Chowdhry
Sharma
Just because your doctor is not talking about osteoporosis
doesn’t mean it’s not happening to you! Lata Jaitly* had a spring in
her step when she went for the final dress rehearsal of her upcoming dance
recital. Years of practice, perseverance and training had seen her in contention
for the best dancer award at the National School of Drama, Delhi. The world was
at her feet... Or was it?
As she danced and landed on her feet after
the perfect pirouette, Lata felt an excruciating pain in both her heels and
collapsed. When she was unable to stand after her fall, she was rushed to Dr
Avnish B Chopra’s clinic — the Delhi Osteoporosis Foundation (DOF)
— and X-rays revealed fractures in both her calcaneal (heel) bones.
Further tests indicated that the 22-year-old was suffering from osteoporosis, a
disease she had never heard about before.
While Lata is an unusual
case because this disease usually does not manifest itself so early, others like
39-year-old homemaker Maya Joshi* are one among three Indian women who are
likely to suffer from osteoporosis by the time they reach their 40s. Yet they
have little or no knowledge about this problem. On a visit to an ultrasound
clinic for a check-up, Maya happened to pick up a brochure on osteoporosis. When
she ended up saying ‘yes’ to more than three factors that put her in
the high-risk group
(see
box: Analyse This),
she signed up for a densitometry test.
The
results revealed that she had low bone mineral density and was suffering from
osteopenia — the stage before osteoporosis. “This is not
uncommon,” says Dr Urvashi P Jha, consultant gynaecologist, Indraprastha
Apollo Hospital, Delhi and president of the Indian Menopause Society.
“Even though 80 per cent of pre- and post-menopausal women are affected by
osteopenia and osteoporosis, not many know about
it.”
The Silent
Thief
So what is this disease which kills more women each year than
breast and uterine cancer put together all about? “Osteoporosis is a
disease in which bones become fragile due to the thinning or softening of the
bone tissue,” explains Dr Chopra, MD and founder of DOF. Literally, it
means ‘porous bone’ and sets in when there is a decrease in bone
mass. Osteoporosis is often called the ‘silent thief’ because it
robs the body of its bones mutely and the sufferer has no hint whatsoever until
it is too late!
“Fractures are the most common symptoms
associated with osteoporosis, with hip fractures topping the list. Simple
actions like bending to pick up a book or banging against a kitchen drawer can
cause broken bones in people suffering from osteoporosis,” he adds. Other
symptoms include collapsing spinal vertebrae, which produces a stooped posture.
“Women are more susceptible to this problem because after menopause the
level of the oestrogen hormone drops in their bodies. Oestrogen is known to
maintain a balance between the bone building and bone excavating cells. Lack or
low levels of this hormone accelerate bone loss,” says Dr Jha.
Only Prevention, No
Cure
While it is true that bones become progressively fragile with
age, structural weakening begins much earlier — usually in your 20s and
30s — and almost always goes unnoticed. Unlike the rest of our body which
groans and protests every time it is not feeling good, your skeleton will send
no warning signals till it is too late. After all, aren’t they just inert
stockpiles of calcium?
“Far from being a lifeless tissue, our
bones are living and constantly build and rebuild themselves,” explains Dr
R. Handa, consultant rheumatologist, All India Institute of Medical Sciences,
Delhi and secretary-general of the Osteoporosis Society of India. “Peak
bone mass is built between the ages of 25 and 35. If you are getting enough
calcium and exercise, you build up a good bone balance and strengthen your bone
matrix. It is what you gain during this period that carries you through
life,” explains Dr Naveen Talwar, a consultant orthopaedic surgeon
affiliated with DOF and Ganga Ram Hospital, Delhi.
“Once you
are over 35, you lose more bone than you gain, meaning that your skeletal
framework erodes if you don’t take constant care of your bone
health,” says Dr Jha. In fact, in women who are fast losers, the bone loss
can be as high as five per cent per year.
While manifestation of
osteoporosis, also referred to as the brittle-bone disease, usually occurs only
after menopause in women, how you take care of your skeletal structure and bones
in your 20s and 30s determines whether or not you are likely to be affected by
it.
“The best time to think about protecting yourself from
this dreaded disease is now, because though osteoporosis is largely preventable,
there is no complete cure available for it,” warns Dr Chopra. For young
women who do not want to spend their later years in pain and misery, here is a
four-step preventive programme.
However, all four steps must be
practised in unison to snuff out the problem at its roots.
Only Prevention, No Cure >>