MEDICATIONS: CHEST X-RAYS MAY PROVIDE
INFORMATION TO HELP DETECT OSTEOPOROSIS IN THE ELDERLY
April 28, 2005 — Undetected osteoporosis in the elderly might be discovered
if chest radiographs (X-ray images) that are done for other reasons were
examined for fractures of the vertebrae, according to an article in the April 25
issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, a journal of the American Medical
Association.
Previous studies estimate that 12 to 25 percent of people aged 50 to 60 years
have one or more osteoporosis-related vertebral fracture, the most common
fracture associated with osteoporosis, according to background information in
the article. While only 30 percent of these fractures come to medical attention
the other 70 percent are associated with illness, death, decreased quality of
life and increased risk of future fractures. The authors suggest that the many
chest radiographs elderly patients undergo for other health reasons might be
examined to determine the presence of vertebral fractures.
Sumit R. Majumdar, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of Alberta Hospital,
Edmonton, Canada, and colleagues selected a random sample of about 10 percent of
patients older than 60 who had been evaluated in the emergency department of a
large teaching hospital and had a chest radiograph done for any reason. The
medical charts and radiographs were then reviewed in detail to determine whether
the patient had a moderate-to-severe vertebral fracture.
Seventy-two (16 percent) of the 459 patients had a moderate-to-severe
vertebral fracture on the basis of their radiograph. Forty-three (60 percent) of
the fractures were documented in the original radiographic reports. Of the 72
patients with fractures, only 18 (25 percent) had histories of osteoporosis.
"Even among the patients admitted to the hospital (198) who also had a vertebral
fracture (32), there was no documented addition of osteoporosis medications
during hospitalization or at discharge," the authors report.
"The most noteworthy finding in our study is the magnitude of the
underdiagnosis and undertreatment of osteoporosis in elderly patients with a
vertebral fracture," the authors write. "One in six elderly patients who
underwent chest radiography in our emergency department had clinically important
vertebral fractures. Nevertheless, only 43 (60 percent) of these fractures were
reported, and only 25 percent of patients with fractures received a diagnosis of
or treatment for osteoporosis."
Editor's Note: This study was supported by grants from Alberta Heritage
Foundation for Medical Research, Edmonton. Dr. Majumdar is a Population Health
Investigator of the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research and a New
Investigator of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Ottawa, Canada. One
of the co-authors, Dr. Rowe holds a Canadian Research Chair in Emergency Airway
Diseases from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
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