|
Link
Between Depression and Bone Loss
Excerpt
By John McKenzie, ABCNews.com
Someone suffering from depression might experience bouts of insomnia,
loss of appetite, and overall lethargy. It can also trigger less
obvious problems.
Growing evidence suggests that depression, one of the most common
diseases of the brain, is so powerful it can actually erode bones
in the body.
Cindy Uhl, a lab technician in Rochester, Minn., was one of
those people determined to stay healthy. She exercised regularly,
ate well, and routinely took vitamin and mineral supplements.
Then one day two years ago, walking to work, she slipped and fell.
Her wrist was shattered.
"It looked like I had gone through a car windshield from the
way the bones had been damaged," she said.
During the operation, doctors discovered why. Uhl had remarkably
brittle bones. At only 46, she had advanced osteoporosis.
"Usually a woman that age can sustain a fall and put their wrist
out and catch themselves and not have any problem," said her physician,
Dr. Lorraine Fitzpatrick of the Mayo Clinic. "But she had this
very bad fracture.
"Cindy had the bones that were the equivalent of someone who's
15 to 20 years older than she was," said Fitzpatrick.
One likely explanation, doctors said, was that Uhl had suffered
from a bout of depression years earlier.
Dr. Philip Gold, chief of the Clinical Neuroendocrinology branch
at the National Institute of Mental Health, is conducting pioneering
research on the effects of depression on bone density.
"If you are a pre-menopausal woman and you've had major depression
you have a 25 to 30 percent chance of having lost significant
amounts of bone and are at much higher risk of fracture," said
Gold.
"The general physician and people in the general population
would be very surprised to find out there is such a significant
risk of osteoporosis in patients with depression."
Brain Controls Hormones,
Causing Bone Loss
Depression is like a severe and prolonged state of stress. It
causes blood pressure and the heart rate to increase. It also
causes the brain to produce dangerously high levels of hormones.
"The brain really controls the hormones in the bloodstream,"
explained Gold. "The brain speaks to the body through hormones,
and that is how the brain induces bone loss and other medical
problems in patients who are depressed."
And it doesn't take much. Research suggests a depression that
lasts only a few months can trigger significant bone loss. There's
preliminary evidence it can have the same effect in men.
"The men who are depressed really seem to lose bone even more
rapidly and to a greater extent than the women," said Gold. But
since bone density in men is greater to begin with, fewer men
are likely to lose enough to have actual bone fractures.
Women at Higher Risk
of Breaking Bones
For women, doctors say, the situation is much more alarming.
Researchers at the National Institutes of Health estimate that
at least 400,000 women in the United States, women in their 30s
and 40s, already have brittle bones as a result of depression
and don't even know it.
"Depression is an under-recognized risk factor for osteoporosis,"
said Dr. Fitzpatrick of the Mayo Clinic. "It just doesn't seem
to be on anyone's radar screen."
The good news, say doctors, is that osteoporosis can be easily
diagnosed with bone mineral density scans, and readily treated
with medications that not only stop bone loss, but actually grow
new bone.
Reference
Source 104
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|