Tuesday’s Health Night to focus on osteoporosis

Osteoporosis – It Matters

Osteoporosis is a disease that causes thinning of bones. Over time, this weakens the bones and can make them more fragile and more likely to break – even under minor stress or spontaneously. It can affect any bone, but the hip, spine, and wrist are most often involved.  

People with osteoporosis may not get any symptoms. Some may have pain in their bones and muscles.  Sometimes, a collapsed vertebra may cause severe pain, decrease in height, or spinal deformity such as a hunched back.   Because many people do not experience symptoms, or may not associate their symptoms with osteoporosis, the condition can be left unchecked until advance symptoms, such a broken bone, occur.  Osteoporosis is, in fact, the leading reason of broken bones among the elderly.  That’s why understanding the risk factors and prevention tactics is so crucial. 

Join orthopaedic surgeon, Daniel Benson, MD, at August’s Health Night on the Town as he discusses osteoporosis and why it matters. Health Night will take place on Tuesday, August 29 at 7 p.m. in the Ridge Conference Room of Methodist Medical Center located at 990 Oak Ridge Turnpike.

Health Night on the Town is an ongoing medical lecture series presented by physicians and other healthcare professionals. It is free and open to the public.  Programs are held the last Tuesday of each month except June, July, November and December.  For more information about Health Night on the Town, please call (865) 835-4662.

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