2007
DOI: 10.1007/s00198-007-0413-1
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Mild prevalent and incident vertebral fractures are risk factors for new fractures

Abstract: Mild vertebral fractures are a risk factor for subsequent vertebral and non-vertebral fracture in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis; 1 out of 4 patients with an incident mild vertebral fracture in 2 years will fracture again within the 2 next years.

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Cited by 139 publications
(99 citation statements)
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“…We showed that presence, number, and severity of prevalent VFs were associated with risk of incident VFs, which is in line with multiple studies showing that prevalent VFs are an important independent risk factor for subsequent VFs (43)(44)(45)54) and several other osteoporotic fractures. (43,44,47,48,54) However, the imminent 1-year risk was much higher than reported in postmenopausal women.…”
Section: Comparison To Published Researchsupporting
confidence: 67%
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“…We showed that presence, number, and severity of prevalent VFs were associated with risk of incident VFs, which is in line with multiple studies showing that prevalent VFs are an important independent risk factor for subsequent VFs (43)(44)(45)54) and several other osteoporotic fractures. (43,44,47,48,54) However, the imminent 1-year risk was much higher than reported in postmenopausal women.…”
Section: Comparison To Published Researchsupporting
confidence: 67%
“…(43,44,47,48,54) However, the imminent 1-year risk was much higher than reported in postmenopausal women. (45) In postmenopausal women selected on the basis of a prevalent VF, low BMD at the femoral neck, or risk factors for hip fracture, the 1-year VF incidence was 1.9% in women without prevalent VFs, 9.9% in women with prevalent VFs of unknown date, and 19.2% in women with an incident VF.…”
Section: Comparison To Published Researchmentioning
confidence: 49%
“…Early diagnosis is important, as partial compression of one vertebral body portends increased risk for progressive fracturing of that vertebra, compression fracturing of one vertebra positively correlates with subsequent compression fracturing of other vertebrae, and vertebral compression increases the risk profile for hip fractures (3,5,(8)(9)(10)(11)(12). Mild compression fractures increase patient risk for new fractures, even as detection sensitivity is lower and interobserver variability is higher, lending importance to sensitive and uniform detection (6,(13)(14)(15)(16). Furthermore, increasing severity of prevalent fractures increases risk for incident fractures; thus, severity grading is important for risk stratification (8,10).…”
Section: Implications For Patient Carementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kaulų čiulpų edemos požymiai MRT tyrime ar radionuklido kaupimas kauluose scintigrafijos metu rodo aktyvų ūmų procesą. MRT tyrimas papildomai naudingas atskiriant osteoporozinį lūžį nuo infekcinių procesų ar patologinių lūžių, įvykusių dėl navikų [30,33,34].…”
Section: Lentelė Stuburo Slankstelių Lūžių Pasiskirstymas Pagal Lokaunclassified