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Bone Health & Osteoporosis Center Toll Free:
1-888-8 BONE 48 (1-888-826-6348)

New Britain General campus:
(860) 224-5548

Other info

Endocrine and Bone Health Center

New Britain General campus: (860) 224-5548
Toll Free: 1-888-8 BONE 48 (1-888-826-6348)

The Hospital of Central Connecticut's Endocrine and Bone Health Center provides diagnosis, treatment and monitoring of osteoporosis and other bone conditions, including hyperthyroidism, vitamin D deficiency and Paget's disease.

The Center's medical director works with patients' primary care physicians and other physician specialists to provide the most effective and appropriate treatments.

Nurses, dietitians, exercise physiologists and other care providers help Bone Health Center patients make lifestyle changes, including diet changes, exercise and smoking cessation.

The center is also dedicated to research and clinical trials that will yield advances in preventing and treating bone disease needs of patients with chronic and life-threatening illnesses.

About osteoporosis

Osteoporosis, one of the most common bone diseases, causes bones to become weak, brittle and at risk for breaks. Though more common in women, it also affects men.

Bone is living tissue that is constantly broken down and re-formed through a two-part process called remodeling. Remodeling consists of resorption, when old bone tissue is broken down, and formation, when new bone tissue is formed.

Osteoporosis occurs when bone removal happens too quickly, replacement too slowly or both. The main cause is age. Remodeling is controlled by hormones that decline with age, including estrogen (in women) and testosterone (in men).

Who's at risk?

  • Women - particularly after menopause. Women who experience menopause before age 50 are at even higher risk.
  • Caucasians and Asians more than African Americans and Hispanics
  • People with a family history of osteoporosis
  • Thin, small-boned people
  • People who smoke or drink excessive alcohol
  • People with inadequate calcium and vitamind D intake
  • People who do not regularly engage in weight-bearing exercise
  • Men and womn undergoing prolonged steroid therapies

Symptoms

Osteoporosis has been called a "silent" disease because there are few symptoms in its early stages. It cannot be detected by conventional X-ray until 40 percent of bone mass is lost. Fortunately, bone mineral density testing can catch the disease early, but some people don't learn they have osteoporosis until a bone breaks, most commonly in the hip, wrist and spine.