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Osteoporosis: Bouncing babies to crumbling wrinklies (20 Oct 2011)

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Uploaded by on Oct 25, 2011

UCL Lunch Hour Lecture: Osteoporosis: Bouncing babies to crumbling wrinklies - the need to own our bones

Professor Allen Goodship (UCL Institute of Orthopaedics and Musculoskeletal Science)

The skeleton is key to our ability to undertake everyday movements and activities related to well-being and high quality independent living. The general perception of bone is that of a museum specimen -- a dry inert structure. This is far from correct; our skeleton is a dynamic and responsive organ. The material properties and structural architecture are conditioned by both genetics and our changing functional demands throughout life. The devastating degenerative conditions such as osteoporosis (in both women and men!) and associated fragility fractures represent a time bomb for society and healthcare requirements in our ageing population. Through an understanding of the pathobiology of bone and the skeleton we can develop strategies to mitigate the risk of these conditions and thus prolong an active and independent life in old age.

This lecture marked World Osteoporosis Day on 20 Oct

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