يحاول ذهب - حر
Why brittle bones aren’t just a woman’s problem
October 22, 2025
|Gulf Today
Ronald Klein was biking around his neighbourhood in North Wales, Pennsylvania, in 2006 and tried to jump a curb. “But I was going too slow — I didn’t have enough momentum,” he recalled. As the bike toppled, he thrust out his left arm to break the fall. It didn’t seem like a serious accident, yet “I couldn't get up,” he said. At the emergency room, X-rays showed that he had fractured both his hip, which required surgical repair, and his shoulder. Klein, a dentist, went back to work in three weeks, using a cane. After about six months and plenty of physical therapy, he felt fine.
But he wondered about the damage the fall had caused. “A 52-year-old is not supposed to break a hip and a shoulder,” he said. At a followup visit with his orthopedist, “I said, ‘Maybe I should have a bone density scan.” As Klein suspected, the test showed he had developed osteoporosis, a progressive condition, increasing sharply with age, that thins and weakens bones and can lead to serious fractures. Klein immediately began a drug regimen and, now 70, remains on one. Osteoporosis occurs so much more commonly in women, for whom medical guidelines recommend universal screening after age 65, that a man who was not a health care professional might not have thought about getting a scan. The orthopedist didn't raise the prospect.
But about I in 5 men over age 50 will suffer an osteoporotic fracture in their remaining years, and among older adults, about a quarter of hip fractures occur in men. When they do, “men have worse outcomes,” said Cathleen Colón-Emeric, a geriatrician at the Durham VA Health Care System and Duke University and the lead author of a recent study of osteoporosis treatment in male veterans. “Men don’t do as well in recovery as women,” she said, with higher rates of death (25% to 30% within a year), disability and institutionalization. “A 50-year-old man is more likely to die from the complications of a major osteoporotic fracture than from prostate cancer,” she said.
هذه القصة من طبعة October 22, 2025 من Gulf Today.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Gulf Today
Gulf Today
Arteta adamant English title can inspire Arsenal to CL glory with win over PSG in final
Mikel Arteta is “fully convinced” Arsenal can be crowned champions of Europe for the first time this weekend after ending their 22-year wait for a Premier League title.
2 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
Dutch under the radar in pursuit of long-awaited global title
Three-time runners-up the Netherlands head into another World Cup with reasons to be hopeful of a long-awaited first global title, but not among the favourites to lift the trophy.
1 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
Modi warns of dangers as heatwave grips India
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi warned of the dangers of “extreme heat” gripping the world’s most populous country on Wednesday, with troops battling forest fires and local authorities reporting deaths from heatstroke.
2 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
From barefoot kid to millionaire, Caicedo keeps chasing trophies
Moises Caicedo lifted his first trophy, a golden plastic cup, among the tightly packed little houses of a working-class neighbourhood in Ecuador. This summer he is heading to his second World Cup.
2 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
Canada’s big banks beat profit estimates despite Iran woes
Canadian banks BMO Financial, Bank of Nova Scotia and National Bank of Canada on Wednesday beat analysts estimates for quarterly profits, strengthened by domestic business and capital markets income, while signaling an optimistic outlook for the Canadian economy despite tensions in the Middle East.
2 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
Violence erupts after ED raids homes of Vijayan
Tensions escalated after officers from the Enforcement Directorate (ED) raided the house of former Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan in the state capital on Wednesday.
1 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
President performs Eid prayer
UAE President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan performed Eid Al-Adha prayer on Wednesday at Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi.
3 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
Coach Scaloni optimistic on Messi recovery as WC looms
Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said the initial news regarding superstar Lionel Messi’s fitness “is not that bad” and hopes further examinations will confirm that diagnosis with the World Cup just a fortnight away.
2 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
Stocks near record highs, oil falls as markets observe US-Iran talks
Wall Street stocks showed little conviction Wednesday, drifting along near record highs, while crude oil prices retreated as investors eyed possible progress in US-Iran peace negotiations.
3 mins
May 28, 2026
Gulf Today
S.Korea’s Son ‘feeling great’ for World Cup despite goal drought
Son Heung-min said he was “feeling great” ahead of the World Cup and backed himself to perform despite suggestions that South Korea's talismanic captain’s powers are on the wane.
1 mins
May 28, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

