Bone Growth and Bone Health
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It is a common misconception that bone is a
hard, lifeless structure. Actually, bone is a complex, living tissue whose growth is
affected by diet and exercise. The body is constantly building new bone tissue while
breaking down or resorbing old bone. Until around age 30, the body builds and stores bone
efficiently and total bone density is increasing or constant. Later in life, the body's
bones begin to break down faster than new bone can be formed. In women, bone loss
accelerates after menopause, when the ovaries stop producing estrogen, a hormone that
helps maintain bone density. Bone is living tissue that is continually damaged by
osteoclasts (cells responsible for destroying bone) and rebuilt rebuilt by osteoblasts
(cells responsible for bone repair). If this destruction/reconstruction process is
unbalanced and bone loss is severe women may experience symptoms
of osteoporosis.
Bone density and strength can change at an
alarming rate.
- People who are bedridden for long
periods of time can easily sustain fracture from minor activity such as walking. This is
due to a weakening and loss of bone that occurs when patients do not receive adequate
weight bearing activity.
- Astronauts who are in space for an
extended period may experience bone loss due to the lack of gravitational pull and weight
bearing on their body and bones.
- Computed tomography (CT) imaging has
shown that tennis players have a larger bone cross section in the humerus of their playing
arm than in the humerus of their non-playing arm. The larger, stronger humerus in the
playing arm results from the added force applied to the bone from swinging the racket
repeatedly.
Updated: April 7, 2008
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