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A Midwestern Doctor's avatar

The most important point to take away from this article is that flexible bones rarely break when shocked or impacted (a change which is largely due to declining hormone levels) . The problem with bisphosphonates is that they make bone denser but less flexible and more brittle, and hence more likely to break when exposed to impacts.

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Lynn's avatar

I have prepared taxes for many widowed or divorced senior women over the last 18 years. In the 2010s, big pharma came out with a drug called Boniva, pushed in ads by actress Sally Field. I recall several years when this drug, and others like it, were pushed through scare tactics and many of my clients took them. During the tax preparation interview process, I'd ask them about their year, and I cannot tell you how many of them related stories of being hospitalized for some length of time due to fractures (hip and/or leg) or other bodily responses related-to-these-bone-strenghtening-drugs. Many of them figured it out, others not so much. I broke my leg in 2011, slipped on a musty piece of wet wood, and immediately I was besieged with medical professionals telling me I needed to get bone scans done. I never did. The orthopedist who I visited during the healing of my leg was a real card, about 70 years old with decades of treating fractures. Mine was a simple one. He triple booked his appointments and then every visit would insist on x-raying my leg to see how it was healing (to bill insurance). The X-ray machine was as old as the hills (I suspect it was a discard from the hospital), and I recall a bucket next to it to catch water dripping off the machine! As an asset, the machine - I am sure - had been fully depreciated years (maybe a decade) ago, but they kept pushing this machine on patients and as an income source. There's pockets of profit everywhere in this uniquely American health care system.

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