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Older women with diabetes have an increased risk of fracture: a prospective study

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TLDR
It is indicated that diabetes is a risk factor for hip, proximal humerus, and foot fractures among older women, suggesting that fracture prevention efforts should be a consideration in the treatment of diabetes.
Abstract
To determine whether type 2 diabetes is associated with fracture in older women, we analyzed data from 9654 women, age 65 yr or older, in the Study of Osteoporotic Fractures. Diabetes with age at onset 40 yr or older was reported by 657 women, of whom 106 used insulin. A total of 2624 women experienced at least one nonvertebral fracture during an average follow-up of 9.4 yr, and 388 had at least one vertebral fracture during an average interval of 3.7 yr. Although diabetes was associated with higher bone mineral density, it was also associated with a higher risk of specific fractures. Compared with nondiabetics, women with diabetes who were not using insulin had an increased risk of hip [relative risk (RR), 1.82; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.24–2.69] and proximal humerus (RR, 1.94; 95% CI, 1.24–3.02) fractures in multivariate models controlling for age, body mass index, bone density, and other factors associated with fractures and diabetes. Insulin-treated diabetics had more than double the risk of foo...

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Epidemiology and outcomes of osteoporotic fractures.

TL;DR: In this paper, epidemiological research was done and used to identify individuals at high risk of disabling fractures, thereby allowing careful allocation of expensive treatments to individuals most in need, which could potentially be as expensive as medical treatment of fractures.
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FRAX™ and the assessment of fracture probability in men and women from the UK

TL;DR: The models provide a framework which enhances the assessment of fracture risk in both men and women by the integration of clinical risk factors alone and/or in combination with BMD.
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Discrepancies in bone mineral density and fracture risk in patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes--a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: A meta-regression showed that body mass index (BMI) was a major determinant for BMD in both the spine and hip and the increase in fracture risk in T1D and T2D was increased and BMD lower in patients with complications to diabetes.
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Evidence-Based Nutrition Principles and Recommendations for the Treatment and Prevention of Diabetes and Related Complications

TL;DR: This 2002 technical review provides principles and recommendations classified according to the level of evidence available, and grades nutrition principles into four categories based on the available evidence: those with strong supporting evidence, those with some supporting evidence), those with limited supporting evidence and those based on expert consensus.
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Systematic Review of Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and Risk of Fracture

TL;DR: An association between both type 1 and type 2 diabetes and increased risk of hip fracture in men and women and between studies conducted in the United States and Europe is supported.
References
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Book

Analysis of Survival Data

David Cox, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors give a concise account of the analysis of survival data, focusing on new theory on the relationship between survival factors and identified explanatory variables and conclude with bibliographic notes and further results that can be used for student exercises.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for hip fracture in white women. Study of Osteoporotic Fractures Research Group.

TL;DR: Women with multiple risk factors and low bone density have an especially high risk of hip fracture and maintaining body weight, walking for exercise, avoiding long-acting benzodiazepines, minimizing caffeine intake, and treating impaired visual function are among the steps that may decrease the risk.
Journal Article

The Modified Mini-Mental State (3MS) examination.

TL;DR: The Modified Mini-Mental State (3MS) incorporates four added test items, more graded scoring, and some other minor changes to sample a broader variety of cognitive functions, cover a wider range of difficulty levels, and enhance the reliability and the validity of the scores.
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