Our bones are alive and constantly growing -- not static, like you see them drawn in literature. Bones continually change throughout your life, with some bone cells dissolving and new bone cells growing back in a process called remodeling. With this lifelong turnover of bone cells, you replace most of your skeleton every 10 years. But for people with osteoporosis bone loss outpaces the growth of new bone. Bones become porous, brittle, and prone to fracture. Look at
an X-ray of a hip with normal bone density, and you see a dense matrix of bone cells. But look at a hip with osteoporosis, and you see mostly air. The bony matrix has all but dissolved, with only a few thin strands left.
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