Two-Thirds of Spinal Fractures
Undiagnosed, Untreated: Report
Stooped back, loss of height and sudden back
pain are all signals, experts warn
Globally, a spinal fracture occurs every 22
seconds.
In fact, it is reported that 20 percent of
women who suffer a spinal fract
ure
will experience a second one within a year.
An undiagnosed and untreated spinal fracture
raises the risk for more fractures and potential
long-term disability.
As part of World Osteoporosis Day on Oct. 20,
the International Osteoporosis Foundation has issued a
new report on the serious but often overlooked problem of
spinal fractures, declaring that two-thirds of them go
undiagnosed and untreated.
A call to action, the report highlights the
consequences of spinal fractures that are misdiagnosed as
arthritis or mere back pain.
These fractures must not be ignored, warn
experts. Their repercussions can be severe, resulting in
stooped back, acute and chronic back pain, loss of
height, immobility, depression, increased number of bed
days, reduced pulmonary function and even premature
death.
Even though spinal fractures are often linked
to osteoporosis, experts at the foundation warn that
physicians often fail to draw a connection between the
two.
For example, just 40 percent of elderly women
and less than 20 percent of elderly men who are diagnosed
with a spinal fracture by X-ray are subsequently tested
for osteoporosis, the report authors
noted.
Doctors must look out for evidence of spinal
fractures, especially in their patients over 50 --
stooped back, loss of height, and sudden, severe back
pain are the three tell-tale signs.
It is essential that doctors refer these
patients for further testing and that radiology reports
clearly identify spinal fractures as 'FRACTURED' to avoid
ambiguity! This coming from expert physicians researching
the subject.
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