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J Clin Epidemiol ; 42(11): 1067-74, 1989.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2809662

ABSTRACT

Long-term fluoride therapy for osteoporosis has been shown to increase the thickness of vertebral trabeculae as seen on spinal radiographs. To determine if this qualitative finding represents a measurable increase in spinal bone density, quantitative computed tomography was utilized to measure trabecular vertebral body density (TVBD) in the lumbar spine of 18 female osteoporotic patients, all of whom had been treated with sodium fluoride, 77 +/- 13 mg/day (mean +/- SD), and calcium, 1000 mg/day, for 57 +/- 24 months. TVBD in these fluoride treated osteoporotic patients (132 +/- 82 mg/cm3) was found to be significantly greater than mean TVBD for an age-matched group of untreated female osteoporotic patients (51 +/- 21 mg/cm3, n = 89, p less than 0.001). The value for TVBD in the long-term fluoride treated osteoporotics was not only similar to previously published values for TVBD (104 +/- 30 mg cm3) in normal females of similar age, but was also above the calculated TVBD "fracture threshold" of 100 mg/cm3 for females. Only one of the 18 fluoride treated osteoporotics continued to have spinal fractures during therapy, accounting for 4 fractures per 87.2 patient years of observation, a value which is significantly lower than the published incidence of 76 fractures per 91 patient years for untreated osteoporotic patients (p less than 0.001). Together, these findings demonstrate that long-term fluoride and calcium therapy for osteoporosis increases TVBD in the majority of patients within a reasonable time frame and significantly reduces the risk for spinal fractures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Bone Density/drug effects , Calcium/therapeutic use , Osteoporosis, Postmenopausal/drug therapy , Sodium Fluoride/therapeutic use , Absorptiometry, Photon , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Lumbar Vertebrae/diagnostic imaging , Middle Aged , Radius , Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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