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More Kids Breaking Their Arms
Excerpt
by Amanda Gardner,
HealthDay
Kids are breaking their wrists and forearms
far more often than they did 30 years ago.
Experts don't yet know what's behind
this increase, but it does raise the possibility that children
and teens aren't getting enough calcium and, as a result, have
lower bone density. This, in turn, raises the specter that these
same kids may develop osteoporosis as they age.
"Adolescence is critical for
bone mass acquisition. It is estimated that a quarter of bone
mass in adult women and men is accumulated during the adolescent
growth spurt," says Dr. Sundeep Khosla, lead author of a
National Institute on Aging-sponsored study appearing in the Sept.
17 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
"The fact that we've seen
this fairly significant increase in forearm fractures in the past
30 years raises the concern that these kids aren't acquiring the
optimal peak bone mass that they should," Khosla says.
The number of distal forearm fractures
(those located near the wrist) usually peaks around age 12 in
girls and 14 in boys. This coincides with the time of the growth
spurt during puberty, and many researchers have hypothesized that
the breaks occur because bones are more vulnerable at this critical
time.
The new data, however, raise additional
questions.
For this study, Mayo Clinic researchers
analyzed the number of forearm fractures occurring in people under
the age 35 who lived in Rochester, Minn., during four distinct
time periods: 1969 to 1971, 1979 to 1981, 1989 to 1991 and 1999
to 2001.
From 1969-1971 to 1999-20001, the
forearm fracture rate increased by 42 percent. In the earlier
period, 265 per 100,000 people broke their forearm annually, compared
with 469 per 100,000 in 1999-2001. Most of these fractures occurred
in people under the age of 20.
Among males, the incidence of fractures
was 32 percent greater in the later period and 56 percent greater
among females in 1999-2001.
The incidence of fractures due
to recreational activities almost doubled.
"Certainly recreation changes,"
says Dr. Stephen Honig, director of the Osteoporosis Center at
the Hospital for Joint Diseases in New York City. "Girls
are doing more sports. There's also in-line skating and other
things including snowboarding. These are higher impact activities."
Khosla, who is a professor of medicine
at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., points out that reasons
for the increase could include increased physical activity as
well as an increase in obesity, which would put a greater load
on the bones when a child falls.
"But among these possibilities
is that they're not acquiring optimal bone mass because they're
not getting enough milk," he adds.
The study authors point out that
between 1977 and 1996, the consumption of soft drinks among girls
aged 12 to 19 increased from 207 to 396 grams per day, while milk
consumption fell from 303 to 189 grams.
"That would suggest that they're
substituting for dairy products," Khosla says. Overall calcium
intake fell slightly from 784 to 771 milligrams per day for girls
and remained about the same for boys, although both values were
below the recommended dietary allowance.
Further studies are needed to see
what characteristics might distinguish kids who have fractures
versus those who don't -- in other words, is there a difference
in level of activity or obesity. Also, researchers need to follow
these kids into adulthood to see if they continue to have lower
bone density and more osteoporotic fractures as they age.
Still, a number of questions remain
unanswered, Honig says.
"If you see someone in their
50s, you're not sure if they're having new bone loss or if it's
a consequence of never having high enough peak bone mass to begin
with," Honig says. "Only the future will tell us where
we are with this."
More information
For more on osteoporosis, visit
the National Osteoporosis
Foundation. The National
Dairy Council has more on calcium intake during adolescence.
Reference
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