Obesity and Bone Health: A Complex Relationship Piñar Gutiérrez, Ana García Fontana, Cristina García Fontana, Beatriz Muñoz Torres, Manuel Eduardo Obesity Fracture Body composition Inflammation Healthy aging Osteoporosis Recent scientific evidence has shown an increased risk of fractures in patients with obesity, especially in those with a higher visceral adipose tissue content. This contradicts the old paradigm that obese patients were more protected than those with normal weight. Specifically, in older subjects in whom there is a redistribution of fat from subcutaneous adipose tissue to visceral adipose tissue and an infiltration of other tissues such as muscle with the consequent sarcopenia, obesity can accentuate the changes characteristic of this age group that predisposes to a greater risk of falls and fractures. Other factors that determine a greater risk in older subjects with obesity are chronic proinflammatory status, altered adipokine secretion, vitamin D deficiency, insulin resistance and reduced mobility. On the other hand, diagnostic tests may be influenced by obesity and its comorbidities as well as by body composition, and risk scales may underestimate the risk of fractures in these patients. Weight loss with physical activity programs and cessation of high-fat diets may reduce the risk. Finally, more research is needed on the efficacy of anti-osteoporotic treatments in obese patients. 2022-09-16T11:12:10Z 2022-09-16T11:12:10Z 2022-07-27 journal article Piñar-Gutierrez, A... [et al.]. Obesity and Bone Health: A Complex Relationship. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 8303. [https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23158303] http://hdl.handle.net/10481/76753 10.3390/ijms23158303 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ open access Atribución 4.0 Internacional MDPI