Early Menopause No Predictor Of Hip Fracture

Women who have an early are unlikely to have a long term increased risk of associated with menopausal weakening, according to a new study from The Australian National University.

For decades have understood a link between and a decrease in . This has translated into clinicians advising women who had an early that they are at particularly of hip fracture – a common complaint amongst the elderly.

The study, led by Emily Banks of the National Centre for and at , has found that age is the main of hip fracture and that among the elderly their age at has little, if any, effect on . Hence, doctors should base their advice on the age of patients alone.

The researchers used data from the UK’s Million Women Study to reach their findings. The Million Women Study recruited 1.3 million women aged 50-64 years who attended screening clinics between 1996 and 2001 to investigate how reproductive and affect women’s health.

“The findings show that among post-, age is the major of and that for women of a given age, their age at has little effect on ,” said Dr Banks.

“The results suggest that clinicians advising women about should probably base their advice on the woman’s age and on age-related factors such as , rather than on factors related to . Clinicians can also now reassure who had early that their risk of hip fracture is unlikely to be higher than that of similar women who had a later ,” she said.

are a serious problem for elderly people, especially women. As people age, their bones gradually lose minerals and become less dense, which makes them more susceptible to fracture. Because women lose faster than men as they age and because women constitute the majority of the elderly, three-quarters of occur in women.

“Although surgical repair of a broken hip only requires a hospital stay of about a week, a quarter of elderly people who were living independently before their fracture have to stay in a nursing home for at least a year after their injury, and a fifth of elderly people who break a hip die within a year,” said Dr Banks.

The study has been published today in Public Library of Science Medicine.

Source
Australian National University

  • Share/Bookmark