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Antidepressant Use Boosts Fracture Risk
Evidence is accumulating that depression is a risk
factor for osteoporosis, reports the June 2007 issue of Harvard
Women’s Health Watch. A recent study found that people ages
50 and over who regularly took antidepressants called selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) had double the rate of fractures
as people not using such medications. Other research points to
depression itself as a source of endocrine changes that can damage
bone.
Whether the danger comes from depression, the drugs used to treat
it, or something else, doctors are paying more attention to this
association. During the 1990s, depression began to emerge as a possible
cause of bone loss, rather than a result. Scientists studied women
who didn’t have osteoporosis symptoms or even know they had
the condition.
They found lower bone mineral density in those who were depressed.
Moreover, the link was found in both younger women and women past
menopause. Other studies have found a similar relationship, so
investigators have been looking at hormones and brain chemicals
potentially involved in both depression and bone loss.
Researchers working with an animal model found that depression
triggers the release of noradrenaline, which interferes with bone-building
cells. Moreover, they found that imipramine—a member of
an older class of drugs called tricyclic antidepressants—reversed
both depression and depression-induced bone loss.
It may be a long time before the depression-osteoporosis connection
is fully clarified. In the meantime, Harvard Women’s Health
Watch suggests that you continue taking an antidepressant if you
already use one; depression is a serious illness that can have
profound consequences. You may also want to talk to your doctor
about getting a bone density test, and make sure you get adequate
calcium.
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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