Peter Attia· MD
it showed that there was a significant decrease in volume in those patients who have HP fractures
The headline is broadly defensible, but the qualifications matter. Effect sizes vary by population, the strongest claims rest on shorter trials, and credible voices push back on how it's typically framed.
it showed that there was a significant decrease in volume in those patients who have HP fractures
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there was a study done out of South Korea that looked it was it was an imperfect study but it was pretty decent they took a group of I think it was it was retrospectively evaluated but they took CAT scans of people who were in for a hip fracture a femoral neck fracture elderly population and they meure measured the volume of their seos muscle so this is the Seas muscle and this is the ilis together they make the ilos soos muscle attaches here and this is what picks your leg up that's what lifts your leg up so if you're you stumble you pick your leg up to save yourself they the volume of that muscle was significantly smaller than that of an aged matched control group who were getting CAT scans for other reason