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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of fluoride treatment on the fracture rate in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis.

TLDR
It is concluded that fluoride therapy increases cancellous but decreases cortical bone mineral density and increases skeletal fragility, and the fluoride-calcium regimen was not effective treatment for postmenopausal osteoporosis.
Abstract
Although fluoride increases bone mass, the newly formed bone may have reduced strength. To assess the effect of fluoride treatment on the fracture rate in osteoporosis, we conducted a four-year prospective clinical trial in 202 postmenopausal women with osteoporosis and vertebral fractures who were randomly assigned to receive sodium fluoride (75 mg per day) or placebo. All received a calcium supplement (1500 mg per day). Sixty-six women in the fluoride group and 69 women in the placebo group completed the trial. As compared with the placebo group, the treatment group had increases in median bone mineral density of 35 percent (P less than 0.0001) in the lumbar spine (predominantly cancellous bone), 12 percent (P less than 0.0001) in the femoral neck, and 10 percent (P less than 0.0001) in the femoral trochanter (sites of mixed cortical and cancellous bone), but the bone mineral density decreased by 4 percent (P less than 0.02) in the shaft of the radius (predominantly cortical bone). The number of new vertebral fractures was similar in the treatment and placebo groups (163 and 136, respectively; P not significant), but the number of nonvertebral fractures was higher in the treatment group (72 vs. 24; P less than 0.01). Fifty-four women in the fluoride group and 24 in the placebo group had side effects sufficiently severe to warrant dose reduction; the major side effects were gastrointestinal symptoms and lower-extremity pain. We conclude that fluoride therapy increases cancellous but decreases cortical bone mineral density and increases skeletal fragility. Thus, under the conditions of this study, the fluoride-calcium regimen was not effective treatment for postmenopausal osteoporosis.

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Citations
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Changes inBoneMineral Density oftheProximal Femur andSpine withAging DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE POSTMENOPAUSAL AND SENILE OSTEOPOROSIS SYNDROMES

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the femur, lumbar spine, and the femoral neck of normal women and found that the regression of femoral density was negative and linear at each site.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emerging concepts in the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and clinical care of osteoporosis across the menopausal transition.

TL;DR: The evidence for bone loss across the menopausal transition is addressed, strategies for detection and treatment of early postmenopausal osteoporosis are discussed, and the role FSH plays in physiology and likely in pathophysiology of earlyPostmenopausal bone loss is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monofluorophosphate increases lumbar bone density in osteopenic patients: a double-masked randomized study.

TL;DR: Comparison at final assessment in the 76 eligible patients (Student'st-test) showed a statistically significant difference between the two groups in the mean BMD increase in favour of FC, and FC appears to be safe and to increase the BMD effectively in patients with low bone mass prior to vertebral fracture.
Journal ArticleDOI

Osteoporosis: The Role of the Orthopaedist.

TL;DR: An update on the pathophysiology of bone metabolism leading to osteoporosis is provided, the latest methodology in the diagnostic workup of patients with low bone mass is described, and the current status of osteopOrosis treatment regimens are summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improved bone biomechanical properties in rats after oral xylitol administration.

TL;DR: Dietary xylitol supplementation in rats improves the biomechanical properties of bone and increases the trabecular bone volume dose dependently.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Applied regression analysis 2nd ed.

TL;DR: This book brings together a number of procedures developed for regression problems in current use and includes material that either has not previously appeared in a textbook or if it has appeared is not generally available.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of the probability of an event as a function of several independent variables

TL;DR: A recursive approach based on Kalman's work in linear dynamic filtering and prediction is applied, derivable also from the work of Swerling (1959), which provides an example of many other possible uses of recursive techniques in nonlinear estimation and in related areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in Bone Mineral Density of the Proximal Femur and Spine with Aging: DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE POSTMENOPAUSAL AND SENILE OSTEOPOROSIS SYNDROMES

TL;DR: The data suggest the existence of two distinct syndromes: one form, "postmenopausal osteoporosis," is characterized by excessive and disproportionate trabecular bone loss, involves a small subset of women in the early postmenopausal period, and is associated with hip fractures or vertebral fractures or both.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of the fluoride/calcium regimen on vertebral fracture occurrence in postmenopausal osteoporosis: comparison with conventional therapy

TL;DR: The combination of calcium fluoride, and estrogen was more effective than any other combination and grounds for optimism about the efficacy of combinations of available agents with sodium fluoride for fracture in postmenopausal osteoporosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concurrent assays of circulating bone Gla-protein and bone alkaline phosphatase: effects of sex, age, and metabolic bone disease.

TL;DR: The serum concentrations of 2 biochemical markers of bone formation, bone Gla-protein (BGP) and bone alkaline phosphatase (BAP), in 164 normal subjects and 164 patients with metabolic bone disorders gave concordant results, however, in patients with glucocorticoid excess.
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