ConsultantLive Members: Login | Register
 |  |
ConsultantLive SearchMedica Medline Drugs

Powered by SearchMedica

 
About Us
Blogs
Dermclinic
Photoclinic
Pediatric Center
Multimedia
Topics
What's Your Diagnosis?
 

Home »

ConsultantLive.com.
 

Bone Density in Postmenopausal Women Swayed by Mood Changes

By Hany Burstein Erez, PhD | January 9, 2013
Dr Burstein Erez is a psychologist in the Department of Psychology at Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel.

Women with diagnoses of depression and low bone mineral density (BMD) are presented with a problematic situation, because antidepressant drugs are associated with decreased BMD and a risk of fractures. Psychotherapy for management of depression may be a solution.

Primary care physicians need to be aware of the relationship between mood and BMD in postmenopausal women, especially because the incidence of mood changes and depression in older women is high.

My colleagues and I addressed these points in a study that appeared recently in Archives of Osteoporosis.

Accumulating Evidence
In the past decade, researchers have begun to study the relationship between decreased BMD and depression. One line of research has found numerous symptoms of depression among women with osteoporosis, compared with healthy women.1 Women who have osteoporosis may have difficulties in executing routine, fairly simple daily tasks, and these difficulties may result in feelings of incapacity, low self-esteem, and an impaired sense of well-being and quality of life, which, in turn, leads to depression.2

A second line of research has focused on psychiatric populations. Researchers have found an association with substantially decreased BMD among women with different levels of depression.3 This effect has been explained by hormonal and immunological processes that evolved during depression and affected bone condition. What’s more, this relationship was found even when mediating lifestyle variables related to depression were controlled.4

Antidepressant drugs, such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, appear to have negative effects on BMD, in some studies leading to at least 4% lower BMD.5,6

A few studies have directly examined the effect of depression on markers of bone condition. These studies found an increase in bone turnover markers, hormones affecting osteoblast activity (cortisol and parathyroid hormone), and proinflammatory markers among patients with diagnoses of clinical depression compared with a control group.7-10

In sum, the accumulating body of evidence from numerous studies, including meta-analyses and longitudinal studies, indicates a relationship of depression with low BMD. However, a number of studies have found evidence contradicting this relationship. Our study aimed to address the inconsistencies.

Depression and Hip BMD
In our study, we found significant negative correlations between depression and BMD variables in 3 areas of measurement. Depression explained 4% to 6% of the variation in 6 BMD variables, beyond background variables. Depression also was found to make a unique significant contribution to the explained variance in right and left hip BMD, after controlling risk factors for osteoporosis and other mood variables, such as anxiety and stress.

Depression triggers the sympathetic nervous system, which, in turn, releases the neurotransmitter noradrenalin. This may play a role in bone loss. The sympathetic nervous system may mediate the skeletal effects of stress-induced depression, and serotonin also may be a factor in bone conditions because it enhances bone formation and limits bone resorption. Depression also affects proinflammatory cytokines and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.

The effects of depression include increased smoking, excessive alcohol(Drug information on alcohol) use, and physical inactivity. Impaired function resulting from osteoporosis (difficulties in functioning physically and a sense of incapacity, low self-esteem, and impairment in sense of well-being and quality of life) may in turn lead to deterioration in mood.
 
The addition of more measurement variables could have increased the validity of our study. For example, laboratory tests (blood or urine) that measure substances secreted by bone during dismantling or construction could serve as additional sources for evaluating bone condition. We also could measure mood variables (cortisol) in further empirical testing and directly investigate the effect of mood on bone density.

Future studies should further examine the complex relationship between depression, antidepressant drugs, and osteoporosis and the effects of psychotherapy on depression, anxiety, stress, and bone condition.

References
1. Coelho R, Silva C, Maia A, et al. Bone mineral density and depression: a community study in women. J Psychosom Res. 1999;46:29-35.
2. Lips P, Agnusdei D, Caulin F, et al. The development of a European questionnaire for quality of life in patients with vertebral osteoporosis. Scand J Rheumatol Suppl. 1996;103:84-85.
3. Wu Q, Magnus JH, Liu J, et al. Depression and low bone mineral density: a meta-analysis of epidemiologic studies. Osteoporos Int. 2009;20:1309-1320.
4. Williams LJ, Pasco JA, Jacka FN, et al. Depression and bone metabolism: a review. Psychother Psychosom. 2009;78:16-25.
5. Cauley J, Fullman RL, Stone KL. Factors associated with the lumbar spine and proximal femur bone mineral density in older men. Osteoporos Int. 2005;16:1525-1537.
6. Diem SJ, Blackwell TL, Stone KL, et al. Use of antidepressants and rates of hip bone loss in older women: the study of osteoporotic fractures. Arch Intern Med. 2007;167:1240-1245.
7. Yirmiya R, Bab I. Major depression is a risk factor for low bone mineral density: a meta-analysis. Biol Psychiatry. 2009;66:423-432.
8. Altindag O, Altindag A, Asoglu M, et al. Relation of cortisol levels and bone mineral density among premenopausal women with major depression. Int J Clin Pract. 2007;61:416-420.
9. Herran A, Amado JA, Garcia-Unzueta MT, et al. Increased bone remodeling in first-episode major depressive disorder. Psychosom Med. 2000;62:779-782.
10. Kahl KG, Rudolf S, Stoeckelhuber BM, et al. Bone mineral density, markers of bone turnover, and cytokines in young women with borderline personality disorder with and without comorbid major depressive disorder. Am J Psychiatry. 2005;162:168-174.

 

Join the Conversation

Want to join the conversation? If you're a healthcare professional, we'd like to hear your comments. Just sign in or register today to become part of our growing, online community.

  • Oldest First
  • Newest First

by jassica joseph | February 12, 2013 7:47 AM EST

Due to depression women not only get toward the growth of born disease problem but can also have certain other disease like high or low blood pressure increasing or decreasing weight and certain kind of hormonal imbalance.Therefore it is equally important for the women to take healthy food and always keep there mind relax by doing certain exercise or yoga.
24 Hours Emergency Care






 
TOPIC INDEX

Asthma

Atrial Fibrillation

Cardiovascular

Cerebrovascular

Developmental/Genetic

Diabetes

Diabetes Type 2

Fibromyalgia

Geriatrics

GI Disorders

Gout

Health Care Reform

HIV/AIDS

Hypertension

Infection

Mental Health

 

Musculoskeletal

Nervous System

Nutritional/Metabolic 

Otorhinolaryngologic 

Pain

Pediatrics

Physical Abuse

Respiratory Tract 

Rheumatic Diseases

Seasonal Allergies

Skin Diseases

Sleep Disorders

Urologic Diseases

Vaccines

Women’s Health

All Topics

 


 
FROM PHYSICIANS PRACTICE
Key Differences between FQHCs and RHCs
Chastity Werner, RHIT, June 13, 2013
FQHCs and RHCs take up a unique niche among physician practices. And that affects compensation and billing.
Improving Care Coordination in Your Practice
Susanne Madden,  June 12, 2013
Practices are feverishly working to control the rising costs of healthcare - effective care coordination can help.
Refunding Overpayments: Two Options for Medical Practices
Ericka L. Adler,  June 12, 2013
Medicare and Medicaid providers must return overpayments once identified. Here are two different refund approaches for practices to consider when necessary.
Four Easy Ways to Boost Patient Time of Service Collections
Aubrey Westgate,  June 12, 2013
Simple ways your medical practice staff can increase the likelihood patients will pay when presenting for appointments.
iPad Alternatives for Mobile Physicians
Marisa Torrieri, June 11, 2013
As more physicians are seeing the merits of media tablets, the market is expanding, too.
 

 

 
MOST POPULAR
  • Most Popular
  • Most Emailed
  • Most Recent
  • Painful Red Ear
  • Facial Skin Problems—A Photo Essay
  • Go For The Glory Quiz: Persistent Oral Lesions, Nevus or Melanoma?, Altered Mental Status in Middle Age, An Itchy, Scaly Rash, Painful Blisters of the Hand
  • Scaly Plaque on the Nose
  • T-Wave Inversions: Sorting Through the Causes
  • Tuberculosis Diagnosis With Handheld Device
  • Physician, First Do No Harm—To Yourself
  • Making the Most of Antihypertensive Drug Combinations
  • Why Doctors Commit Suicide
  • Superficial Abrasion After a Fall From a Bicycle
  • Women Underrepresented in Antiretroviral Clinical Trials
  • Crohn’s Disease: New Scoring System Predicts Mild Disease
  • Iron-deficiency Anemia in IBD: These Patients Need Primary Care
  • Statins Plus Exercise: New Study Questions the Combination
  • Benign Congenital Nevus
Click here to subscribe to our newsletter
 
COMMENTS
  • Most Commented
  • Most Recent
  • Nodular Basal Cell Carcinoma
  • Short on Physicians, Long on Adverse Effects
  • Wanted: Physician Feedback on Medical Cannabis
  • Why Doctors Commit Suicide
  • Crusted Scabies
  • Scaly Plaque on the Nose
  • Short on Physicians, Long on Adverse Effects
  • Furuncle Caused by Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) Infection
  • Resistant Hypertension: Four Pearls for Your Practice
  • Nodular Basal Cell Carcinoma
Click here to subscribe to our newsletter


CancerNetwork | ConsultantLive | Diagnostic Imaging | Musculoskeletal Network | OBGYN.net | PediatricsConsultantLive |
Physicians Practice | Psychiatric Times | SearchMedica | Medical Resources

© 1996 - 2013 UBM Medica LLC, a UBM company
Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Advertising Information - Editorial Policy Statement - UBM Medica Network Privacy Policy