In order to analyse the clinical characteristics and the principal causes of osteoporosis in men, 81 osteoporotic males from an out-patient rheumatology department were studied. Bone mass assessment, automated biochemical profile and biochemical markers of bone turnover were performed in all patients, and hormonal measurements were taken when a specific aetiology was not readily apparent. Sixty-three men (78%) had secondary osteoporosis and 18 (22%) primary osteoporosis. Secondary causes of osteoporosis included hypogonadism (12 patients), corticosteroid therapy (10 patients) and alcoholism (10 patients); the remaining patients had various causes of osteoporosis. Eighteen patients had primary osteoporosis, eight of them with associated hypercalciuria. Normocalciuric patients showed lower 25-hydroxyvitamin D and 1-25-hydroxyvitamin D levels than the control group, whereas hypercalciuric patients had lower parathyroid hormone and renal threshold for phosphate excretion. In 69 patients (85%), back pain was the chief complaint. Forty-five of these 69 patients (65%) had chronic back pain and 24 (35%) had subacute episodes. Fifty per cent of the patients with chronic back pain had vertebral fractures. Both patients with and without chronic back pain were found to have a similar number of vertebral fractures. In conclusion, male osteoporosis is frequently associated with major risk factors. Patients with primary osteoporosis may have associated hypercalciuria or decreased vitamin D levels. However, not all the patients for whom back pain was the chief complaint were found to have vertebral fractures.
To assess whether vertebral fractures are associated with osteopenia in chronic alcoholic patients, a transversal study was carried out in 76 chronic alcoholic males and 62 age-matched healthy males. Lumbar bone mineral density (BMD) by dual photon absorptiometry and spinal chest X-ray films were done in all patients. Twenty-seven patients (36%) had vertebral fractures, but only 5 of them had a BMD below the fracture threshold. Twenty-two patients (29%) had osteoporosis by densitometric criteria. There were no significant differences in lumbar BMD between alcoholic patients with and without vertebral fractures (1.11 +/- 0.2 versus 1.13 +/- 0.2, P = ns). Previous trauma was recorded in 24 of the 27 patients with vertebral fractures and in 28 of the 49 patients without vertebral fractures (P < 0.001). Moreover, patients with vertebral fractures had more peripheral fractures than patients without vertebral fractures (81% versus 49%, P = 0.01). Only one patient was aware of a previous episode of traumatic vertebral fracture. In conclusion, chronic alcoholics frequently have traumas and vertebral fractures, the latter despite having a lumbar BMD above the fracture threshold, suggesting a frequent but unrecognized association between both processes. These results suggest that both spine films and BMD measurements should be obtained for diagnosis of osteoporosis in alcoholic patients.
Secondary processes that contribute to low bone mass in postmenopausal women with OP are frequent, especially vitamin D insufficiency, increased PTH values, and hypercalciuria. In addition, increased bone resorption is frequently observed in this group of women. Most of these processes contributed to the severity of the disease.
In conclusion, factors predicting discontinuation of TNF antagonists due to AEs are older age and diagnosis of RA. On the other hand, younger age predicts discontinuation due to lack of efficacy.
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