Can Your Dental Exam Reveal Osteoporosis? Punta Gorda FL

Researchers at the School of Dentistry, University of Manchester, have created a new way of identifying osteoporosis in patients. Software that detects osteoporosis during routine dental x-rays automatically measures the thickness of the patient's lower jaw.

Michael R Markgraf, DDS
941-575-2273
301 W Olympia Ave
Punta Gorda, FL
Richard J Rand, DMD
941-639-8030
428 E Olympia Ave
Punta Gorda, FL
Joseph J Maggiore, DDS
941-639-1124
502 E Olympia Ave
Punta Gorda, FL
Ralph Jamison Brandon, DDS
941-639-1658
302 Nesbit St
Punta Gorda, FL
George Alexander Sanchez, DDS
941-637-0101
351 W Marion Ave
Punta Gorda, FL
Jeffrey F Joffe, DDS
941-637-6003
2705 Tamiami Trl # 112
Punta Gorda, FL
David Paulson, DDS
941-505-0577
1900 Tamiami Trl Ste A
Punta Gorda, FL
Malcolm Henry Kerstein, DDS
727-848-7777
5811 Pelican Bay Blvd Ste 103
Punta Gorda, FL
Frederick A Fox, DDS
386-788-9959
235 N Causeway
Punta Gorda, FL
Joseph B Lawson, DDS
941-764-0919
24123 Peachland Blvd # A18
Punta Gorda, FL
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Can Your Dental Exam Reveal Osteoporosis?

As medical consumers, we love getting more than we bargained for. What if you could get screened for osteoporosis during a dental exam?  In the near future, that just may be the case.

According to the National Osteoporosis Foundation, osteoporosis is a disease in which bones become fragile and more likely to break. If left untreated, osteoporosis can progress painlessly until a bone breaks, typically in the hip, spine, and wrist.

Approximately 10 million Americans currently have osteoporosis, while another 34 million have low bone mass and increased risk for osteoporosis.  Nearly 80 percent of them are women, and many have no idea they're at risk.  That's why research that enables dentists to screen for osteoporosis is so promising.

Researchers at the School of Dentistry, University of Manchester, have created a new way of identifying osteoporosis in patients. Software that detects osteoporosis during routine dental x-rays automatically measures the thickness of the patient's lower jaw. The study findings, published in the journal Bone, are based on x-rays of 652 European women aged 45 to 70. All women also underwent DEXA (dual energy x-ray absorptiometry scans),  a traditional bone density test as well as panoramic dental X-rays, which show the whole jaw. The DEXA scans found osteoporosis in the hip or spine in 140 women. Analysis of dental X-rays picked up more than half of these cases.

The findings suggest that eventually, routine dental X-rays could provide an inexpensive way to screen older adults for osteoporosis. Those with bone thinning in the jaw could be referred for more expensive osteoporosis testing...

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