Osteoporosis Information
Osteoporosis is a disease that weakens bones to the point where they break easily-most often bones in the hip, backbone (spine), and wrist. It's called the "silent disease"-you may not notice any changes until a bone breaks-but your bones have been losing strength for many years.
Bone is living tissue. To keep bones strong, your body continually breaks down old bone and replaces it with new bone tissue. As people enter their forties and fifties, more bone is broken down than is replaced. A close look at the inside of bone shows something like a honeycomb. When you have osteoporosis, the spaces in this honeycomb grow larger and the bone that forms the honeycomb gets smaller. The outer shell of your bones also gets thinner. All this loss makes your bones weaker.
This article continues at Osteoporosis Information.