7 research outputs found

    Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Santa Fe Bone Symposium, August 3-4, 2007

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    The Eighth Annual Santa Fe Bone Symposium convened August 3-4, 2007, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA, immediately preceded by the Research Symposium in Metabolic Bone Disease and Osteoporosis Update for Endocrine Fellows, and followed by the International Society for Clinical Densitometry (ISCD) Bone Densitometry Course. The symposium faculty consists of internationally recognized experts in osteoporosis and metabolic bone disease who presented state-of-the-art research data and late-breaking developments in the fields of osteoporosis, metabolic bone disease, and assessment of skeletal health. The presentations and numerous interactive discussions that followed focused on applying what is known from clinical trials, knowledge of bone pathophysiology, and the mechanisms of action of therapeutic interventions, to making real-world patient management decisions. Topics included an update on reimbursement issues for bone density testing in the United States, a report on the 2007 ISCD Pediatric and Adult Position Development Conferences, present and future therapeutic concepts, new paradigms for fracture risk assessment and intervention thresholds, evaluation for secondary causes of osteoporosis, nonvertebral fracture risk reduction-medical evidence and clinical practice, epidemiological insights into the prevention of osteoporotic fractures, osteonecrosis of the jaw facts and fictions, and osteomalacia. Presented here are short essays based on the key clinical presentations of the 2007 Santa Fe Bone Symposium

    Joint Official Positions of the International Society for Clinical Densitometry and International Osteoporosis Foundation on FRAX® executive summary of the 2010 Position Development Conference on Interpretation and use of FRAX® in clinical practice

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    The International Society for Clinical Densitometry (ISCD) and the International Osteoporosis Foundation (IOF) convened the FRAX® Position Development Conference (PDC) in Bucharest, Romania, on November 14, 2010, following a two-day joint meeting of the ISCD and IOF on the “Interpretation and Use of FRAX® in Clinical Practice.” These three days of critical discussion and debate, led by a panel of international experts from the ISCD, IOF and dedicated task forces, have clarified a number of important issues pertaining to the interpretation and implementation of FRAX® in clinical practice. The Official Positions resulting from the PDC are intended to enhance the quality and clinical utility of fracture risk assessment worldwide. Since the field of skeletal assessment is still evolving rapidly, some clinically important issues addressed at the PDCs are not associated with robust medical evidence. Accordingly, some Official Positions are based largely on expert opinion. Despite limitations inherent in such a process, the ISCD and IOF believe it is important to provide clinicians and technologists with the best distillation of current knowledge in the discipline of bone densitometry and provide an important focus for the scientific community to consider. This report describes the methodology and results of the ISCD-IOF PDC dedicated to FRAX®

    Atopy and the gastrointestinal tract - a review of a common association in unexplained gastrointestinal disease

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    In addition to diseases conventionally associated with atopy there is increasing recognition that atopy is also linked to a spectrum of gastrointestinal (GI) manifestations, including food allergy, primary eosinophilic GI disease, functional gastrointestinal disorders, gluten interactions, gastroesophageal reflux disease and inflammatory bowel disease. These associations may be underpinned by shared genetic susceptibilities, initiation of related immune pathways and common patterns of exposure to environmental cues, including allergen/pathogen encounters and variations in the composition of the intestinal microbiota. Further scrutiny of GI diseases with prominent allergic-type immune responses may yet redefine treatment paradigms for these common and important atopy-associated diseases. Looking forward, interventions by manipulation of the microbiota or host immune responses hold promise, but there is still room for further exploration of this novel field of host susceptibility, host-microbe interactions and atopy-associated GI diseases

    American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists Medical Guidelines for Clinical Practice for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Postmenopausal Osteoporosis

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