Photo via Wikimedia Commons/Chaim Mintz | |
A
wheelchair rugby teammate of mine recently broke his thumb in a rugby
match. While he was recovering, he slipped while transferring (the thumb
didn’t help) and whoops, broken foot. Another friend, a para, was in
bed stretching his legs when he pushed too hard and broke his femur.
Cheryl Angelelli, an incomplete quad, writes about how she broke three ribs (wheelchair ballroom dancing) and her foot (another transfer fall) in the span of a year.
For many active wheelchair users, our entire lives are refutations of
the idea that people with disabilities are medically fragile and in need
of protection — but alongside this truth is a parallel, frustrating
fact: Our bones snap a whole lot easier than those of our nondisabled
peers.
Equally frustrating: It can feel like we don’t have much control over
our bone health. After a spinal cord injury, we lose bone mass almost
immediately, and within the first year of a complete spinal cord injury,
50% of people develop osteoporosis.
This newsletter looks at bone health among wheelchair users, the risks
associated with SCI and fractures, what you can do to improve bone
health, and finally, how to reduce the risk of fracture if your bones
are already weak. | |
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OFFLOADED BONES LOSE MASS QUICKLY
People with spinal cord injury experience bone loss at a much quicker
rate than those who walk around all the time. In the 2009 article, “Osteoporosis: Avoiding the Breaks,”
Bob Vogel talks with Dr. Douglas Garland, who at that point had been an
orthopedic surgeon for 30 years, with 20 years researching osteoporosis
and SCI. Garland describes how people with SCI lose bone mass:
“The most crucial piece of information is this: With SCI, your bones get
thinner (weaker) from the hip to the knee, and thinner still from the
knee to the heel. The longer you have been injured, the more fragile
your bones become.”
People with SCI don’t lose bone mass everywhere, just in the areas that
no longer bear weight. So, my rugby teammate’s thumb and Angelelli’s
rib breaks are less to do with disability and more due to the trauma of a
wheelchair rugby crash or a dance partner falling on you. But the
stretching-related femur fracture and the transfer-related foot
fractures have SCI fingerprints all over them.
Back to Vogel, as he explains in “Fracture Risk and Treatment Options with SCI,” there are a couple of important thresholds to keep in mind when it comes to bone loss:
“Losing 32% of [bone mineral density] puts you in the ‘fracture
threshold.’ You run the risk of fracture from a fall, a missed transfer
or a tumble out of your chair. A loss of 50% BMD is considered the
'fracture breakpoint.' These really fragile bones can fracture from
minor movements like stretching, a simple fall from the chair, or even
rolling over in bed.”
It’s too much to go into here, but Vogel gives a helpful breakdown of
how to estimate your own bone loss based on time after injury and why
standard bone density (DEXA) scans can be misleading for wheelchair
users in his “Osteoporosis Update.” | |
HOW TO PREVENT AND REVERSE BONE LOSS
As a wheelchair user, improving bone health comes down to two
strategies. First, try to slow down bone loss as much as possible, and,
if you already have osteoporosis, consider options to rebuild bones.
In 2023, The Journal of Personalized Medicine published a
paper that synthesizes some of the best scientific research and
guidelines around bone health, fracture risk and osteoporosis in people
with SCI. Recommendations from that paper include:
- Take both Vitamin D and Calcium supplements.
They recommend a “maintenance dose” of 1,000-2,000 IU of Vitamin D3 and a
Calcium dose of 1,000-1,200 milligrams depending on age, gender and
whether you have a history of kidney or bladder stones. People with SCI
are at higher risk of developing bladder stones with calcium
supplementation, so it’s worth consulting with your urologist before
starting a supplementation regimen.
- Regular
standing or walking — using a standing frame, forearm crutches, an
assisted treadmill, or an exoskeleton — can load your lower extremity
bones enough to improve bone health.
- Functional
electrical stimulation of lower extremities is helpful as well. Strong
muscle contractions produced by FES can load bones enough to stimulate
growth.
- Pharmacological interventions such
as Alendronate, Zoledronic Acid and Densoumab can also help improve
bone health, though only Alendronate has been studied on people with
chronic SCI.
There’s a lot more in that study — it’s worthwhile
reading if you’re up for parsing dense, scientific language. Or even
better, send it to your doctor before your next appointment so they can
read it and help you develop a personalized plan to improve your bone
health.
In “Searching for Osteoporosis Solutions as a Wheelchair User,”
Angelelli reports on her attempts to get insurance to pay for Forteo
and Tymlos, two injectable bone-building drugs. After years of
battling, she was ultimately approved for Tymlos, and she shares her
experience managing side effects and daily injections as a quad. | |
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For people with SCI, the most common fractures occur in the tibua/fibula, femur and hip bones. | |
HOW TO REDUCE FRACTURE RISK
Improving bone health is a slow process, even if you’re doing everything
right. If you’re one of the many who are already at the “fracture
threshold” or “fracture breakpoint” that Garland mentioned, it’s time to
learn how to reduce risks.
Talk to a group of longtime wheelchair users and it’s pretty easy to see
how most broken bones occur: either from falling out of your chair
while you’re rolling (stupid pinecones) or falling while transferring. Research backs this up and also shows that most fractures occur in the tibia/fibula, femur and hip.
Reducing your risk of breaks doesn’t require doing less. Instead, good technique in your daily movements and a more stable wheelchair setup can help you stay active while keeping your bones intact. If you roll a lot outside, a longer wheelbase wheelchair, larger soft-roll casters (four or five-inch diameter), or suspension forks like FrogLegs can all help keep you from pitching forward out of your chair.
For technique, Vogel recommends that people untuck blankets at the foot
of your bed to avoid catching your feet when rolling over, and to avoid
twisting when you’re stretching or ranging your legs, as femur’s can
break more easily when you apply torque. Mark Wellman, a para and one of
the founders of the adaptive climbing movement, says he treats every
transfer with the carefulness of a climbing move. “I make sure where my
hand holds are, check where my legs are and make sure they won’t twist
or get caught before I make my move.”
Of course, accidents still happen, even with good technique and bone
health. Just ask my rugby teammate. Like with everything else, healing a
fracture can be more complicated with a SCI. But that’s a topic unto
itself. Let us know if you’d like us to cover it in a follow-up article
or newsletter. | | |
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