2023-01-26T11:03:02Z
2023-01-26T11:03:02Z
2017-05-04
2023-01-26T11:03:02Z
Atypical femoral fractures have been associated with long-term bisphosphonate treatment.1,2 However, the underlying mechanisms remain obscure. We studied three sisters who had atypical femoral fractures after receiving various oral bisphosphonates for 6 years. Two of the sisters had a single fracture (at the ages of 64 and 73 years), and one had bilateral fractures (one at the age of 60 years and the other at the age of 61 years). Given the low incidence of atypical femoral fractures in the general population (5.9 per 10,000 person-years),3 we hypothesized that these sisters might have an underlying genetic background that contributed to these fractures.
Artículo
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Mutació (Biologia); Fractures; Músculs; Mutation (Biology); Fractures; Muscles
Massachusetts Medical Society
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMc1612804
New England Journal of Medicine, 2017, vol. 376, num. 18, p. 1794-1795
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMc1612804
(c) Massachusetts Medical Society, 2017