Res Ipsa wrote:Thanks for checking, but I’m fine with you posting the doc’s information. I’m in the Seattle area. I saw the bone loss information in the package information, but it sounds like I need to be more pro active than I thought. Thanks for all the information and advice.
See? This is one of the things I do when I say I work online for support groups. I've been doing this one for 5 years. I don't like giving details publicly but I'll do it to help someone else. I do it nearly every day of my life.
Never let your GP, NP, or PA to evaluate you for bone density issues. What they actually do is allow the scanner report to diagnose you. They don't know what they are doing. They don't know the history of the DXA scanners and how medications evolved over time along with the scanners, they don't know how the WHO determined what constitutes bone thinning vs bone density loss. They don't understand the values they are reading so they go with a particular score found on the report and advise meds. They do not understand the inner workings of the scanners, margins for error (LSC tests), calibration issues and software updates, or any other damn thing.
Trust me, they do not.I could tell you case after case, and even my own case is proof positive that this is true. You do NOT want that.
You want a good baseline scan with a doc who knows precisely what they are doing regarding your individual health history and scans results, and then a good follow on scan by the
same facility on the
same machine two years later.
Docs who eval and treat patients for bone loss are endocrinologists, rheumatologists, and nephrologists.
I'm giving you a well known and highly regarded expert here:
Dr. Susan M. Ott
Internal medicine - nephrology
4245 Roosevelt Way NE Florida 2, Seattle, Washington 98105
(206) 598 - 4288
Her work regarding densitometry and short stature adults, and the work of the world class expert that I see saved my sanity.
I will drive my point home so you get a referral to her and keep her on your medical team.
Had I listened to the so-called diagnosis and medical advice of my then (now fired) healthcare professional 5 years ago, by the time I had finally learned my stuff via Dr. Ott's study, my online participation, personal research, and saw the expert that I do see now...I would have shown up at his office on year 4 of a medication that carries with it a window of 3-5 years when one can take it safely because somewhere inside that window, the medication itself can cause the very fractures that you are trying to prevent---and with no way to test when you've reached that threshold. That is to say, I could have been
in a hospital by that time suffering from debilitating spontaneous femur fractures instead of out and about, enjoying my life, and working out like I do now.
As it stood at the time, I walked into his office 4 years later knowing what I was talking about and he said so. ;-)
And get this, the 2 sets of scans that I had originally done 2 years apart? They both contained errors, not the least of which was that one of them was measuring and comparing the WRONG vertebrae (it matters!), and my healthcare professional (now fired) at the time (who got paid for reviewing them) didn't even notice it. Nor did she understand that my results (the scores she based her diagnosis on) can never be accurate on account of my height and would be the same issue were I a very tall person.
Don't mess around with this. You need to take your new inhaler as prescribed. You also need to just shoot over to Dr. Ott and get a baseline and just discuss with her, so you don't get caught up in a giant medical cluster some years down the road. If you need to use regularly your inhaler, she can help you avoid the cluster.
I'm not trying to scare you. I'm trying head you off at the pass and save you from going through the miserable crap that I've seen hundreds upon hundreds of patients go through because
their docs didn't pay sufficient attention to--corticosteroids, steroids (pred) eating disorders, hyperparathyroidism, cancer meds, malabsorption issues, pregnancy/lactation, kidney problems--all of these and other things-- that can cause humans to lose bone mass.
I regularly recommend Dr. Ott to patients in the area. Go see her, get it done, and get it out of the way. And let her run these baseline labs on you if she will:
PTH Intact
Bone Specific Alkaline Phosphatase
Vitamin D25 Hydroxy
C-Telopeptide (CTX)
Osteocalcin
Celiac Disease Panel
Immunofixation IFE/PE
Sed Rate Westergren
Phosphorous
Total Calcium
Preopetide Type 1 Collagen (P1NP)
Greek right?
