Osteoporosis Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Osteoporosis stocks.

Osteoporosis Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 3 LLY Lilly's new Alzheimer's drug could generate $7.1B in sales: analyst
Jul 3 LLY S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 Climb To Record Highs As Data Fosters Rate Cut Optimism Ahead Of Fed Minutes; Gold, Bonds Rally: What's Driving Markets Wednesday?
Jul 3 LLY Novo Nordisk, Eli Lilly Tumble After Study Suggests Weight-Loss Drugs Can Lead To Blindness
Jul 3 LLY Weight-loss drugs linked to rare vision loss: Harvard study
Jul 3 LLY ADP jobs data, Constellation Brands, summer gas prices: Morning Brief
Jul 3 LLY Ozempic Linked to Rare Cases of Vision Loss in Harvard Study
Jul 3 LLY FDA Approves Eli Lilly's Alzheimer's Drug Kisunla
Jul 3 LLY Top 3 Health Care Stocks That May Crash This Quarter
Jul 3 LLY Eli Lilly (LLY) Gets FDA Nod for Alzheimer's Drug Donanemab
Jul 3 LLY 5 Things to Know Before the Stock Market Opens
Jul 3 LLY Eli Lilly Advances Alzheimer's Solutions With Kisunla Approval
Jul 3 LLY Eli Lilly Shares Gain After Drug-Maker Gets FDA's Nod For Early Alzheimer's Treatment
Jul 3 LLY Tesla, Paramount Global, Annovis Bio, Eli Lilly, Amazon: Why These 5 Stocks Are On Investors' Radars Today
Jul 2 LLY Boeing, Tesla stock reaction, small-cap portfolio: Market Domination
Jul 2 LLY Eli Lilly’s donanemab wins FDA approval for Alzheimer’s disease
Jul 2 LLY Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly Slide as Biden Blasts Weight-Loss Drug Prices
Jul 2 LLY Alzheimer’s Disease Treatments: What to Know About New and Future Drugs
Jul 2 LLY Eli Lilly Wins Long-Awaited Approval For Biogen-Rivaling Alzheimer's Drug
Jul 2 LLY Eli Lilly Gets FDA Approval for Alzheimer's Disease Drug
Jul 2 LLY Biden, Sanders call for obesity drug makers to cut prices
Osteoporosis

Osteoporosis is a disease where increased bone weakness increases the risk of a broken bone. It is the most common reason for a broken bone among the elderly. Bones that commonly break include the vertebrae in the spine, the bones of the forearm, and the hip. Until a broken bone occurs there are typically no symptoms. Bones may weaken to such a degree that a break may occur with minor stress or spontaneously. Chronic pain and a decreased ability to carry out normal activities may occur following a broken bone.Osteoporosis may be due to lower-than-normal maximum bone mass and greater-than-normal bone loss. Bone loss increases after menopause due to lower levels of estrogen. Osteoporosis may also occur due to a number of diseases or treatments, including alcoholism, anorexia, hyperthyroidism, kidney disease, and surgical removal of the ovaries. Certain medications increase the rate of bone loss, including some antiseizure medications, chemotherapy, proton pump inhibitors, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, and glucocorticosteroids. Smoking and too little exercise are also risk factors. Osteoporosis is defined as a bone density of 2.5 standard deviations below that of a young adult. This is typically measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry.Prevention of osteoporosis includes a proper diet during childhood and efforts to avoid medications that increase the rate of bone loss. Efforts to prevent broken bones in those with osteoporosis include a good diet, exercise, and fall prevention. Lifestyle changes such as stopping smoking and not drinking alcohol may help. Biphosphonate medications are useful in those with previous broken bones due to osteoporosis. In those with osteoporosis but no previous broken bones, they are less effective. A number of other medications may also be useful.Osteoporosis becomes more common with age. About 15% of white people in their 50s and 70% of those over 80 are affected. It is more common in women than men. In the developed world, depending on the method of diagnosis, 2% to 8% of males and 9% to 38% of females are affected. Rates of disease in the developing world are unclear. About 22 million women and 5.5 million men in the European Union had osteoporosis in 2010. In the United States in 2010, about eight million women and one to two million men had osteoporosis. White and Asian people are at greater risk. The word "osteoporosis" is from the Greek terms for "porous bones".

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