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Social isolation is not only bad for mental health, but also bone health
Social isolation is associated with a deterioration in bone quality, particularly in males, reveals a new scientific study. — aquaArts studio/Getty Images/ETX Studio pic

NEW YORK, June 19 — Loneliness became a major societal preoccupation during the Covid-19 pandemic, as lockdowns and social distancing propelled the issue into the spotlight. At the same time, numerous scientific studies on the subject have established a link between social isolation and deteriorating mental health, which plays a role in increasing the risk of physical health problems and death. The latest study even reveals that social isolation has a negative impact on bone health.

While the Covid-19 health crisis brought to light the many risks and dangers of social isolation, a new scientific study now reveals that loneliness is also bad for bone quality. Surprising research, to say the least, but it could ultimately lead to paying greater attention to the bone health of isolated individuals, in particular the elderly. Especially given that we still don’t know all the health effects of the increase in social isolation that resulted from various lockdown and social distancing measures mandated throughout the Covid-19 pandemic.

Presented at ENDO 2023, the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society (June 15-18), the research was conducted by scientists at the MaineHealth Institute for Research in Scarborough, USA. "Previous clinical research has demonstrated that psychosocial stressors, and subsequent mental health disorders, are major risk factors for osteoporosis and fracture, which disproportionally affect older adults. The effects of social isolation on bone, however, have not been thoroughly investigated,” said Rebecca Mountain, PhD, lead researcher of the study, in a press release. She added that loneliness was already associated with an increased risk of health problems of all kinds, as well as higher death rates.

Is loneliness bad for your bones?

This new research was not conducted with human participants, but with adult mice, thus necessitating further study. The scientists divided the rodents into two categories: those subjected to social isolation, meaning one adult mouse per cage, and those cohabiting in a group — four mice per cage — for a period of four weeks. At the end of their work, the researchers observed a significant drop in bone quality, and in particular a reduction in bone mineral density, in male mice who had been in isolated conditions. It should be noted that bone mineral density corresponds to the quantity of calcium and other minerals contained in bone tissue, and thus helps determine bone strength and resistance.

"Overall, our data suggest that social isolation has a dramatic negative effect on bone in male mice, but it may operate through different mechanisms or in a different time frame in female mice. Future research is needed to understand how these findings translate to human populations,” explains Rebecca Mountain. Further work will also help to understand and determine the mechanisms by which this impact can occur — in other words, how and why loneliness can be detrimental to bone health.

Such research is important at a time when all the health effects of Covid-19-related social isolation are not yet known, bearing in mind that the pandemic is not solely responsible for the loneliness suffered by populations worldwide. "Social isolation is a potent form of psychosocial stress and is a growing public health concern, particularly among older adults. Even prior to the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has significantly increased the prevalence of isolation and loneliness, researchers have been concerned about a rising ‘epidemic of loneliness’,” warns the study’s lead author. — ETX Studio

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