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Orthopedics

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Orthopaedics

West Virginia

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Improving Rural Bone Health And Minimizing Fracture Risk In West Virginia: Validation Of The World Health Organization Frax® Assessment Tool As A Phone Survey For Osteoporosis Detection, Franklin D. Shuler Md, Phd, Kelly Scott Md, Mph, Timothy Wilson-Byrne Md, Miranda R. Morgan, Linda Morgan May 2016

Improving Rural Bone Health And Minimizing Fracture Risk In West Virginia: Validation Of The World Health Organization Frax® Assessment Tool As A Phone Survey For Osteoporosis Detection, Franklin D. Shuler Md, Phd, Kelly Scott Md, Mph, Timothy Wilson-Byrne Md, Miranda R. Morgan, Linda Morgan

Orthopaedics

West Virginia ranks second nationally in population ≥ 65 years old placing our state at greater risk for osteoporosis and fracture. The gold standard for detecting osteoporosis is dual X-ray absorptiometry (DXA), yet over half of West Virginia’s counties do not have this machine. Due to access barriers, a validated phone-administered fracture prediction tool would be beneficial for osteoporosis screening. The World Health Organization’s FRAX® fracture prediction tool was administered as a phone survey to 45 patients; these results were compared to DXA bone mineral density determination. Results confirmed that the FRAX® phone survey is as reliable as DXA in …


Extraskeletal Effects Of Vitamin D: Potential Impact On Wv Disease Morbidity And Mortality, Franklin D. Shuler, Dana Lycans, Elias Salloum Jan 2012

Extraskeletal Effects Of Vitamin D: Potential Impact On Wv Disease Morbidity And Mortality, Franklin D. Shuler, Dana Lycans, Elias Salloum

Orthopaedics

Vitamin D is an essential nutrient and a secosteroid hormone that regulates many physiologic processes beyond calcium and bone homeostasis. These "extraskeletal" effects are impacted by the circulating levels of the storage form of vitamin D, 25-hydroxyvitamin D3. Levels of vitamin D can be detected after completing a simple 25(OH)D blood test. Vitamin D deficiency (< 30 ng/mL) is associated with a higher risk of many chronic diseases including, but not limited to, fourteen types of cancers, type 1 and 2 diabetes mellitus, obesity, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, stroke, and asthma. This article explores the association between vitamin D deficiency and the burden of chronic diseases in West Virginia.