Drug curbs bone loss after spinal cord injury
Mon May 7, 2007 11:36AM EDT
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The bone drug Fosamax (also called alendronate) 
given
soon after spinal cord injury prevents bone loss associated with the injury, a 
study
suggests.

People who've suffered spinal cord injury are at risk for rapid bone loss 
occurring
below the level of the injury due to an increase in the harmful process of bone
resorption as well as impaired bone formation, thereby predisposing them to
osteoporosis and bone fractures.

In their study, Dr. Nigel L. Gilchrist, of The Princess Margaret Hospital,
Christchurch, New Zealand, and colleagues randomly assigned 31 spinal cord 
injury
patients to Fosamax (70 milligrams per week) or placebo, within 10 days of 
injury,
for 12 months.

The team measured bone mineral density (BMD) at various sites including the 
lumbar
spine, hip, femoral neck (the area where thigh bone meets the hip) and total 
body at
the start of treatment and at 3, 6, 12, and 18 months.

The researchers observed significant changes favoring the Fosamax group for 
five of
six total body BMD measurements across 18 months.

In this study, write the authors, "preservation of BMD with alendronate was 
clearly
demonstrated."

Whether such treatment prevents lower limb fractures in the longer term 
"remains to
be investigated," they note.

SOURCE: Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, April 2007.


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