Calcium deficiency? Osteoporosis can begin in the early 30's. Someone in their 30's needs at least 1200mg per day to keep up with the body's requirement...more as you get older. Also, look into what things you are eating that may be causing calcium to leak out of the body faster than normal.
2007-05-02 12:11:08
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answer #1
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answered by Ken F 5
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There's Brittle Bone Syndrome, Osteoporosis is a possibility and there's Paget's Disease, to name few, many things can cause your medical condition. Speak to your doctor, go to a specialist and run blood tests and bone scans they may do an MRI. Tell your doctor you want tests done, to find out why this has been happening all your life, you have to be diligent, if your doctor doesn't give you the help you need, change doctors, and this is important, if your doctor uses medical terms you don't understand tell him, ask him to explain, so you know exactly what's going on. It's your health take care of it. Good luck.
2007-05-02 17:55:45
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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hi there
havin just broken a bone in my wrist i certainly have empathy for you. X-rays and surgery not a great indicator of bone strength. Suggest you , like me will have to have bone density studies done. Talk to your doctor but it is a painless procedure that will demonstrate bone density/strength as either normal, osteopenia, or worst case scenario osteoporosis.
There are treatment options once you know what is going on with your bones
Good luck
Cheers
2007-04-25 13:49:40
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answer #3
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answered by wooble1 3
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In its own healthy sort, cholecalciferol does not have essential part within the metabolic rate, instead this is a metabolic solution (calcitriol) which usually has the serious capabilities. It is usually turned into calcitriol in 2 simple steps, the earliest within the liver and the next within the renal system. • Calcitriol or even bioactive cholecalciferol is usually a type of steroid ointment bodily hormone to blame for intended for nearly 10 % family genes (i.e., almost Two thousand family genes) in the whole genomic contents in the body anatomy. What's more, it adjusts the vitamin metabolic rate in the body system.
2016-04-01 07:30:27
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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There is a problem, I'm not sure how to spell it, but you may have been born with a mild form of osteogenesis imperfecta.
Translated: Imperfect bone formation
It's a genetic thing that can render children into wheelchair bound criples by age ten or younger. You may have a very mild form of it.
You may also have a form of osteoporosis. Men will get it, just not as often as post-menopausal women.
Get a bone scan. Women will have their wrists scaned for bone density. You may have low bone density.
Here is some info I found on a medical website about osteogenesis imperfecta:
History: Patients often have a family history of OI, but most cases are due to new mutations.
* Patients most commonly present with fractures after minor trauma.
* In severe cases, prenatal screening sonography performed during second trimester may show bowing of long bones, fractures, limb shortening, and decreased skull echogenicity. Lethal OI cannot be diagnosed with certainty in utero.
* Patients may bruise easily.
* Patients may have repeated fractures after mild trauma. However, these fractures heal readily.
* Deafness is another feature. About 50% of type I OI have deafness by the age of 40 years.
Physical: Physical examination can vary depending on the severity. Degrees of severity may vary among different affected members of the same family.
* Type I - Mild forms
o Patients have no long-bone deformity.
o The sclera can be blue or white. Blue sclera also may occur in other disorders, such as progeria, cleidocranial dysplasia, Menkes syndrome, cutis laxa, Cheney syndrome, and pyknodysostosis.
o Dentinogenesis imperfecta may be present.
o Over a lifetime, numbers of fractures can range from 1 or 2 to 60.
o Height is usually normal in individuals with mild forms of OI.
o People with OI have a high tolerance for pain. Old fractures can be discovered in infants only after radiographs obtained for other reasons other than an assessment of OI, and they can occur without any signs of pain.
o Exercise tolerance and muscle strength are significantly reduced in patients with OI, even in the mild forms.
o Fractures are most common during infancy, but they may occur at any age.
o Other possible findings include kyphoscoliosis, hearing loss, premature arcus senilis, and easy bruising.
Causes: Osteogenesis is an inherited disorder. In almost all cases, mode of inheritance in OI is dominant or involves a new dominant mutation regardless of the clinical form of OI observed. A recessive pattern of inheritance has been demonstrated in some families from South Africa. Some have proposed possible germ-cell mosaicism as an explanation for cases occurring in families with healthy parents that have more than 1 child with OI. Syndromes resembling OI may be inherited in recessive fashion.
2007-04-25 13:51:20
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answer #5
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answered by WhatAmI? 7
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