A new study shows that women who have
rheumatoid arthritis, a condition in which the immune system attacks its own joint tissue,
may be twice as likely to develop osteoporosis compared with healthy women. Osteoporosis is a
degenerative bone disease affecting one third of post-menopausal women. According to researchers, women with rheumatoid
arthritis are at a high risk of developing osteoporosis and those who use steroid drugs to
help control the arthritis are at an even higher risk of bone loss.
The study, published in the
March 2000 issue of Arthritis and Rheumatism,
followed 394 women with rheumatoid arthritis between the ages of 20 and 70. They found significant reductions
in bone mineral
density in the 394 women compared with healthy
American and European women. The average
reduction in bone mineral density among rheumatoid arthritis patients was 27.6% in the
femoral neck, 31.6% in the total hip, and 19.6% in part of the spine. Older women (between 60 and 70 years old) were
more likely to have reductions in bone mineral density at all three sites (the neck, hip,
and spine).
According to Kenneth Saag, MD,
all women with rheumatoid arthritis are at a very high risk of developing osteoporosis:
twice as high as healthy women. Furthermore,
the use of steroids to control rheumatoid arthritis put women at an even higher risk. The highest frequency of reduced bone mineral
density occurred in patients who used prednisone, a certain type of steroid used to treat
rheumatoid arthritis.
Researchers say that women with rheumatoid arthritis should be routinely screened for osteoporosis. Currently, less than 15% of rheumatoid arthritis patients on prednisone have bone mineral density tests . Dr. Saag advises women with rheumatoid arthritis to ask their physicians about beginning osteoporosis screening exams, especially if they are older and are taking prednisone.
Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic disease that can cause pain, stiffness, and inflammation of the joints. Researchers are still unsure of the exact cause of rheumatoid arthritis but believe it may be a combination of genetic factors, an abnormal autoimmune response, and a viral infection. It is estimated that 2.5 million Americans suffer from rheumatoid arthritis, 60% of them women.
- The April 24, 2000 Reuters Health report, “Osteoporosis Risk Doubled Among Women with Rheumatoid Arthritis,” is available at http://womenshealth.medscape.com/reuters/prof/2000/04/04.24/20000424epid002.asp
- The April 28, 2000 WebMD report by Andrea M. Braslavsky, “Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients at Higher Risk for Bone Loss,” is available at http://my.webmd.com/condition_center/rha
- To learn more about osteoporosis, please visit http://www.imaginis.com/osteoporosis/osteo_whatis.asp