What Happens
In a normal, healthy adult,
bone is continually absorbed into the body and then
rebuilt. During childhood and the teen years, new bone tissue is added faster
than existing bone is absorbed. As a result, your bones become larger and
heavier until about age 30 when you reach peak
bone mass (density). The more bone mass you developed
early in life, the less likely you are to develop
osteoporosis.
After age 30, both men and
women lose a small amount of bone each year. Because most men build greater
bone mass than women do, they tend to get osteoporosis later in life.
A person with thinning bones may be diagnosed with lower-than-normal bone
mass (osteopenia). Osteopenia sometimes
progresses to osteoporosis.
When bones thin, they lose strength
and break more easily. The bones that break most often due to osteoporosis are:
- The spine. About half of broken bones caused by
osteoporosis are bones in the spine.1 Men and women
who have a spinal fracture have a higher risk of future spinal
fractures.2 Vertebrae that are weak because of
osteoporosis may break and collapse on top of each other (compression
fracture). Compression fractures of the
spine
can result in back pain, stooped posture, loss
of height, and a curved upper back (dowager's hump). - The hip. Hip fractures are most common in older
women. Hip fractures are often caused by a fall. They can make it very hard for
you to move around and they usually require major surgery. After a hip
fracture, many older people have medical complications such as blood clots,
pressure sores, or pneumonia.
- The wrist and forearm.
In women, bone loss increases when the ovaries reduce
production of
estrogen, a hormone that protects against bone loss.
Studies show that on average, women lose 1% to 3% of their bone mass every year
for about 3 to 5 years after
menopause.3
In
men, the hormone
testosterone protects against bone loss. Osteoporosis
develops most often in men older than 65.
See a picture of
healthy bone versus bone weakened by osteoporosis
.