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by phnofive
2474 days ago
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As usual, the headline ought to be taken from the publication. Bone strength was virtually unchanged for every group in the study; no participant had osteoporosis. Mean BMD went down a hair for all groups, but estimated failure load was considered statistically the same: > At trial end[...] > mean percent change in [radial] volumetric BMD of −1.2% (400 IU group), −2.4% (4000 IU group), and −3.5% (10 000 IU group). > mean percent change [...in tibial volumetric BMD] of −0.4% (400 IU), −1.0% (4000 IU), and −1.7% (10 000 IU). > There were no significant differences for changes in failure load (radius, P = .06; tibia, P = .12). |
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The bone density decreases may look minor on paper but look at it this way: it’s quite possible that a very large cohort of elderly and middle aged people concerned about their bone health (potentially because they were told they have reason to be concerned) have been paying a lot of money annually to actually worsen their situation. That sucks.