Every year on 20th October, World Osteoporosis Day (WOD) is observed to create a global awareness for the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of osteoporosis. The condition is more concerning because according to the World Health Organization (WHO), osteoporosis has come second after heart disease as a global health problem. But its number of patients in India is estimated to be higher than in many other countries.
What Does The Research Say?
A study published in the Indian Journal of Medical Research in 2018 revealed that about 9% of people in Delhi had osteoporosis, a "silent disease" of bones, and about 60% were suffering from osteopenia, a pre-osteoporosis condition. This research, published by the Indian Council of Medical Sciences, was conducted on men and women aged 38 to 68 in collaboration with the Orthopedic Department of a hospital in New Delhi and the Arthritis Care Foundation. But experts believe that this number is increasing continuously not only in our country but all over the world.
Studies have also been done to understand the causes of this condition. It was seen that not just age and lack of proper nutritional intake, but many other habits also contribute to causing osteoporosis. In 2015, researchers from the US National Jewish Health Center claimed on the basis of a study that smokers, especially men, were considered more vulnerable to bone problems such as osteoporosis.
The findings of the research, published in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society General, suggested that bone density decreases in smokers who also suffer from COPD. The research was conducted on 3321 participants aged 45 to 80 years and it was also observed that men who smoke were up to 55% more at risk of reduced bone density, as well as the risk of vertebral fractures could be up to 60% higher in them.
Everyone knows that the effect of osteoporosis is more visible in women because their body lacks naturally available calciumand other nutrients. But apart from nutrition, there are many other factors that increase the risk of osteoporosis. In research conducted in the year 2019, it was revealed that lack of sleep in women can also increase the risk of osteoporosis. In this research, women who slept for only 5 hours or less were made subjects and they were found to have a relatively low bone mass density.
Symptoms of Osteoporosis