Medications are normally used by women already at risk for fractures
Laura D. Carbone, M.D., of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, and colleagues conducted a study using data from the Women's Health Initiative on 133,855 women, of whom 3,411 used loop diuretics and 130,444 did not. They looked at the women's risk of falls and fractures over a mean period of 7.7 years and analyzed data on baseline and three-year bone mineral density for 300 users and 9,124 non-users of loop diuretics. Women who had ever used loop diuretics were not at significantly increased risk of total, hip and clinical vertebral fractures and falls, the data revealed. However, those who used loop diuretics for more than three years had a 16 percent higher risk of both clinical and total fractures, compared with non-users, the researchers report. There was no association between changes in bone mineral density and use of loop diuretics, the investigators found. "The relationship of falls to medication use is complex. We hypothesized that loop diuretics might be positively associated with falls because they may cause orthostatic hypotension," the authors write. "Prolonged use of loop diuretics was associated with higher fracture risk in postmenopausal women." Carbone reported grant support and honorarium from Procter & Gamble and honorariums from Merck, Novartis and Aventis.
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