Source - http://news.yahoo.com/
By - Christopher Wanjek
Category - Golf Resort In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
By - Christopher Wanjek
Category - Golf Resort In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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| Golf Resort In Miami |
It's a long-known association: hard drinking leads to weak bones.
Doctors know that alcohol abusers are more likely than abstainers to
suffer from frequent bone fractures, and slow bone healing.
However, precisely why this is the case has been a mystery. Doctors
have attributed the association to multiple reasons, such as the
malnutrition commonly seen among alcoholics, as well as myriad
interactions between alcohol and hormones.
Now a team of researchers from Loyola University Medical Center in
Maywood, Ill., has found how alcohol slows bone healing at a cellular
and molecular level. This effect of poor bone healing, the researchers
said, would apply to binge drinkers as well as alcoholics.
This problem can be particularly serious during the adolescent and
young adult years, when the body is building stores of calcium in bones
for long-term bone health.
The researchers present their findings here yesterday (Oct. 6) at the
American Society for Bone and Mineral Research 2013 Annual Meeting.
Alcohol abuse is a double-punch problem for bone health, explained Dr.
Roman Natoli, an orthopedic surgery resident at Loyola's Stritch School
of Medicine and lead presenter of the study.
"Many bone fractures are alcohol-related, due to car accidents,
falls, shootings, etc.," Natoli said. "In addition to contributing to
bone fractures, alcohol also impairs the healing process."
Yet the occasional nip might be good for bone health. A study published
in 2012 in the journal Menopause found that up to one drink a day could
curb bone loss in women over age 50. And a 2008 study in the American
Journal of Medicine found that people who consumed a half to one drink a
day had a lower risk of hip fracture compared to both abstainers and
alcoholics.
To better understand this complicated connection between alcohol and bone health,
Natoli and his team turned to mice. The researchers divided ordinary
lab mice into two groups, one exposed to alcohol levels about equivalent
to three times the legal limit for driving, and a control group given
no alcohol.
The researchers found differences between the control group and the
alcohol-exposed group in the hard bony tissue that forms around the ends
of a fractured bone, called the callus. In the mice exposed to alcohol,
the callus was less mineralized, meaning not as much bone was forming.
Moreover, the bone that did form was not as strong.
Also, the alcohol-exposed group had signs of oxidative stress, a
process that produces chemicals called free radicals that, when at the
wrong place at the wrong time, can impair normal cellular functions.
Free radicals are highly chemically reactive.
Beyond this, the alcohol-exposed group had significantly lower levels
of a protein called osteopontin. Osteopontin, along with a second
protein called SDF-1, are involved in recruiting stem cells to the
injury site. These stem cells mature into bone cells.
As a follow up to this study, Natoli said he is interested in injecting
mice with bone stem cells with an antioxidant that combats oxidative
stress called NAc, to see if that speeds up the healing process for mice
exposed to alcohol.
Such treatment could help alcoholics, Natoli said. But the best advice
for those mending a broken bone may be to pass on heavy drinking for a
few months while the bone heals properly.

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