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Wednesday, November, 25, 2009
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Conflict of doctor opinions Forteo vs calcium medications

subscriber123

subscriber123

Wednesday, April 02, 2008
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My mom was diagnosed with severe osteoporosis 7 months back. She is 67 years old and is in India. The doctor (Doctor 1) advised her to take forteo. Since this is the first osteoporosis medication she has taken it is difficult to know if this medication is effective or not. Few months later she had fr...
  1. conflict of opinion
    Lila de Tantillo
    Wednesday, April 02, 2008 at 05:24 PM

    Thanks so much for sharing your excellent questions with us! It is sometimes quite difficult to know what the best course of action to treat low bone might might be, and the task becomes even harder when different doctors are saying different things. As your mother discusses these issues with her physicians, these are important things for her to keep in mind:

     

    Forteo is a very powerful medication and not all patients are good candidates for it. (Scroll down on http://www.forteo.com/ to see who should NOT take it.) Is Doctor 2 recommending she not take it because your mother has a condition with which Forteo is contraindicated, and which Doctor 1 overlooked? If so that is a serious matter, quite different from a separate issue of whether this particular medication is the most effective for her specific condition.

     

    The latest research does indicate that Forteo can help increase bone mass considerably in eligible patients. But a doctor may also consider other prescription medications, such as bisphosphonates, or non-prescription calcium regimens, instead. When you say your mother has "severe" osteoporosis, I assume this is this based on the T-score from a DXA scan? Your mother may want to ensure she has received this vital scan and has the exact numbers readily available to discuss her with her treating physician(s), so that they can render their medical opinions with the most inforrmation possible.

     

    At the end of the day, it is a judgment call on the part of a patient and a medical professional on the potential risks vs. benefits of one course of treatment compared to another. Best wishes as you help your mother navigate this tough issue.

     

     

     

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    re: conflict of opinion
    subscriber123
    Wednesday, April 02, 2008 at 09:11 PM
    Thanks for the quick response. What is the minimum duration a patient must take Forteo for effectiveness?
    Reply
    re: re: conflict of opinion
    Lila de Tantillo
    Friday, April 04, 2008 at 11:14 PM
    I've never heard of a particular minimum, but the maximum would be two years, as the use of Forteo for longer periods has not been studied.
    Reply
  2. Untitled Comment
    Lisa
    Sunday, June 01, 2008 at 01:11 AM

    forteo is not likely to cause a frozen bone. Was she taking a bisphosphonate prior? That drug stops blood flow to the bone to cause something of that nature.   Forteo increases blood flow.   It is not likely to do something of that nature because the amount of time that it is used.   Frozen bone would be something that would happen over a period of time.

    Reply
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