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by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

 

http://www.womentowomen.com/bonehealth/osteoporosis.asp

In a mere twenty years, the perception of osteoporosis has morphed

from a rare but serious disease that affected only older women to a

frightening condition of epidemic proportions that threatens almost

half of post-menopausal women in the U.S.

 

What's changed?

 

Frankly, not much except the hype. I rarely criticize the drug

companies, but in this case I have to say the publicity about

osteoporosis is mostly about profits, not about women's health.

 

I want every woman to understand that there's so much you can do to

support bone health — naturally and without drugs. I've seen so many

patients actually reverse osteoporosis by fixing their nutrition and

digestion and adrenal function.

 

So let's cut through the hype and understand the reality behind your

risk of osteoporosis — and what you should be doing to promote bone

health no matter your age.

 

Osteoporosis: countering the fears

Bone loss and fractures have always been a concern for women over

65, and rightly so. But a couple of decades ago research indicated

that bone loss speeds up in the years immediately after menopause,

raising concerns about osteoporosis among much younger women. Next,

conventional medicine created a new condition, osteopenia, which

soon was construed to be a precursor to real disease. Suddenly any

woman over 40 felt she was at risk for osteoporosis.

 

Compounding these fears is women's confusion over bone mineral

density tests. The BMD compares your bones to those of much younger

women. But who's to say whether your bone density is abnormal if you

can't compare it to your own baseline? Moreover, bone density itself

is not a very good measure of bone strength or the risk of fracture.

But women aren't told to take their BMD results with a grain of

salt. On the contrary.

 

I think it is no coincidence that much of the fuss about

osteoporosis coincides with the shameless marketing of HRT to women.

For almost 60 years, based on very little research, HRT was given to

women to keep them " forever young " , as though menopause was

unhealthy or at least to be avoided. By expanding their target

market (HRT was supposedly good for all women) and their usage (HRT

was prescribed as a preventative) these drugs became the most-

prescribed drugs in America. A similar campaign is underway today

for Fosamax.

 

Let me say one more thing about using fear to market drugs. The

pharmaceutical companies want you to think something's wrong with

your body that only their drugs can fix. The truth is your body is

quite miraculous, with healing powers far greater than any drug, and

a little bone loss is perfectly normal.

 

Healthy bone function and peak bone mass

Bone loss is a natural, in fact vital process. Only bone loss

(called resorption) can initiate healthy new bone formation (called

deposition or formation). As with all things in nature, good bone

health relies on a balance between this action and counter-action,

like breathing out and breathing in.

 

New bone is strong, flexible with the ability to bear both

compression (running, jumping) and tensile (flexing) pressure. Bones

strengthen with use, just like muscle, all through your life. But at

some point, bone loss gradually begins to outpace bone growth — when

this begins happening is highly individual, but it can be as much as

20 years or more before menopause.

 

Bone health is influenced by many factors: family history, body

frame size, diet, calcium intake, vitamin D levels, physical

exercise, hormonal balance, stress, and lifestyle. And because bones

are constantly regenerating, before and after menopause, every

positive step you take to support their function will make a big

difference — whenever you take them.

 

To get a better idea of how this works, let's take a closer look at

our bones.

 

Bones are complicated living tissue, not hard shells around soft

marrow like soup bones. Bones are 35% latticed protein — an

infrastructure known as the collagen matrix — and 65% mineralized

collagen, which gives the bone its strength.

 

Bone health depends on the give-and-take process I described above,

also called remodeling. During this process, bone cells called

osteoclasts travel through bone tissue retrieving old bone and

leaving small, jagged spaces behind. This triggers their

counterparts, called osteoblasts, to come into these spaces and

deposit new bone. About 5-10% of all our bone tissue is replaced —

or turned over — in a year in this way. Osteoblasts cannot work

properly without sufficient osteoclast activity, and new bone is

stronger and — this is key — more flexible than old bone.

 

Exercise and physical stress naturally build new bone and speed the

remodeling process, even when you're older. That's why you can lift

progressively heavier weights in an exercise program — it's not just

muscle you're building.

 

But no matter how much bone you make, you'll still experience bone

loss with age. The bell curve looks something like this: during

puberty, when our body and skeleton are growing, bone formation

outpaces bone loss. Between age 20 and 30 most women have reached

peak bone mass, but the age varies depending on race and lifestyle.

 

The concept of peak bone mass has been oversimplified. The accepted

idea is that it's like a retirement account — the more healthy bone

you've accumulated by your mid-20's, the more you'll have to draw

down as you get older. But peak bone mass can vary as much as 100%

in women of the same age from different cultures. And peak bone mass

seems to have minimal affect on fracture risk: for instance, Asian

women have a lower bone mass than Western women but a lower fracture

rate.

 

Differences in ethnicity, diet, exercise, onset of puberty, and

lifestyle make peak bone mass a very individual characteristic, hard

to quantify — and not a good measure of bone health.

 

At some point in your mid to late 30's, bone resorption begins to

outpace formation (by about 0.5-1.0% per year). After menopause this

rate may accelerate to 1.0-5.0% with the dip in reproductive

hormones. Within five years after menopause, when hormonal

fluctuations settle down, bone loss evens out again to a gradual and

perfectly normal decline of 1.0-1.5% per year.

 

So what differentiates normal and abnormal bone loss — and who's

really at risk for osteoporosis?

 

What is osteoporosis anyway?

If you have established osteoporosis (not just the risk of getting

it), bone loss may accelerate over time to absorb up to 1/3rd of

your total bone mass. Over time whatever bone is left is thin and

porous — it looks like ruined honeycomb — and fractures easily doing

everyday things like walking and coughing.

 

Before 1994, to officially have osteoporosis, you actually had to

break a bone as the result of minor impact or trauma. Since then,

new bone-scanning technology has cast a wider net and allowed

medicine to quantify the diagnosis. Osteoporosis is now defined as

having a bone mineral density (BMD) that deviates more than 2.5

points below a standard. That standard is the average for a large

sample of 20 to 29-year-olds. In short, you're being compared to

young women with supposedly peak bone density.

 

What is osteopenia?

As recently as the 1970's, the diagnosis of osteopenia didn't exist

(my colleague, Dixie Mills, checked her textbooks from medical

school just to be sure). Experts chose this term in the 1980's to

fit the women who didn't quite have osteoporosis to motivate them to

pay attention to bone health.

 

However, there was no medical basis for choosing this number and no

studies to support everyone's immediate assumption that a diagnosis

of osteopenia meant you were headed for osteoporosis. No one seemed

to notice — except of course the drug companies — that by this

definition almost half of all post-menopausal women now had the new

medical condition called osteopenia.

 

Because osteoporosis is progressive, the diagnosis of osteopenia can

be very frightening — many women stop lifting heavy objects or

engaging in physical exercise for fear of fractures. But in reality

almost all women with osteopenia should be getting more exercise,

not less!

 

Risk factors and causes of osteoporosis

A small percentage of women will get true osteoporosis. Osteoporosis

occurs earlier and more severely in white women of Northern European

descent who are small-boned and thin. And despite the claims made by

the calcium supplement makers, the highest rate of osteoporosis is

seen in cultures that eat the most dairy.

 

Other risk factors for osteoporosis include:

 

post-menopause, either natural or surgical

maternal history of osteoporosis

delayed puberty, persistent amenorrhea, low hormone levels or other

endocrine disorders

poor diet, including vitamin D, calcium, and/or magnesium deficiency

gastrointestinal disorders that interfere with natural mineral

absorption

eating disorders

advanced age

heavy alcohol consumption

smoking

under or over-exercising

less than 15% body fat

elevated blood acid levels

use of corticosteroids or other medical drugs

thyroid or kidney disorders

bone cancers or other malignancies

I would add that adrenal exhaustion is a major factor in my patients

with osteoporosis. I often see women with several problems or co-

morbid conditions: inadequate nutrition, weak digestion, low

metabolic rate (often as a result of chronic dieting), and adrenal

fatigue. For these women, osteoporosis is a result, not an

underlying cause, of other health conditions. Giving them a drug

like Fosamax does nothing to fix the real problems.

 

Click here to learn more about how to prevent weak bones and what

substances you should avoid.

 

Bone density, bone strength and the risk of fracture

When most women hear the word " osteoporosis " they think with a

shudder of hip fractures, broken wrists, and the loss of height and

spinal deformity characterized as the " dowager's hump " . We

automatically assume, because we've been told, that low bone density

is the first step to bone fractures.

 

But there is no hard evidence that bone density correlates with bone

strength or flexibility — the two factors that prevent bone from

fracturing under stress. In fact, bones can be dense (rich in

calcium and hard) yet brittle — what matters more is the health of

the collagen matrix, which keeps the mineralized bone supple and

resilient.

 

The collagen matrix is a foundation of nutrients and minerals that

allows the bone to expand, contract, and mend without breaking.

Think of the difference between a living, breathing sand dollar and

its ossified shell, or a slab of dried wood and a thinner piece that

has been saturated in protective oils. While this is not an exact

comparison, it may help you understand why a dense, hard covering

can actually be more fragile than a thin but well-integrated whole —

and why drugs like Fosamax and Actonel that treat only bone density

do not necessarily prevent fractures.

 

Bone density test and osteoporosis screening

Unfortunately we can't test bone health directly — we mostly look

only at bone density. But it's better than nothing, as long as you

remember the limitations of the test.

 

When diagnosing osteopenia or osteoporosis, most doctors rely on a

bone density test, usually dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, or

DEXA. There are other tests, including CT scans, dual photon

asorptiometry (DPA) and ultrasound, but DEXA is by far the most

prevalent. Please click here for more information on bone density

testing and its use in osteoporosis diagnosis.

 

Be sure when discussing your BMD results with your healthcare

practitioner, remember to ask what standard you were evaluated

against. Often simply normalizing for your age, race or region will

give you very different results. And be sure to get a copy of the

results. This is your test and you should keep your own medical

file.

 

Bone health and fractures

While fractures are frightening and can be incapacitating, the

common perception that low bone density causes fractures is

misleading. The simple reality is that falls cause fractures. The

average age of a hip fracture for a woman is 79, and over 90% of hip

fractures occur after a fall (not vice versa). Most falls are due to

complicating factors, and low bone density is pretty far down on the

list of risks. Click here for more information about osteoporosis

and the risk of bone fractures.

 

Why has there been so much focus on bone density as a cause of

fractures if the relationship is so weak? One answer is that we

actually have a test for bone density. The other is that there is a

product to sell — biphosphonates (such as Fosamax and Actonel) and

HRT.

 

Drugs for osteopenia and osteoporosis

Research on HRT in the 1970's showed that estrogen therapy (and

later the combined estrogen plus progesterone therapy) helps inhibit

bone loss for about seven years after menopause.

 

This news meant that prescriptions for HRT were written increasingly

for the prevention of diseases like osteoporosis — not for relief —

and as a result, women were put on hormone therapy whether or not

they were experiencing symptoms of menopause. And the truth is that

HRT does help bone density — at least in some women.

 

No wonder HRT was the most frequently prescribed drug in this

country by 2001! A year later, when the WHI released its data on the

real risks of HRT, this became a dubious practice.

 

Another fact women weren't told is that once hormone therapy is

discontinued, bone loss accelerates to reach its age-appropriate

rate — the nominal gains are " wiped out " . Most HRT studies are

rarely carried out for longer than a few years, at which point bone

loss may have stabilized itself anyway. And there's no indication

that HRT therapy has any long-term effect on fracture risk in women

over 75 — when most fractures occur. And there are no studies of the

long-term effects on bone health of HRT therapy.

 

Fosamax charged into the osteoporosis market as HRT receded. Fosamax

works by inhibiting bone resorption. Unfortunately that's not as

good as it may sound. Remember that bone function is a two-way

street; if resorption is delayed, then so is formation — so no bone

is lost, but no new bone is made.

 

Evista (raloxifene) is a selective estrogen receptor modulator

similar to tamoxifen. It is increasingly prescribed to women with or

at risk for osteoporosis. Developers claim it reduces fractures

without the risks of HRT. Side effects include increased hot

flashes, leg cramps, flu-like symptoms, blood clots and peripheral

edema. These symptoms of inflammation are obviously not good for

you. Studies are currently underway looking at this drug's potential

to prevent breast cancer.

 

Osteoporosis prevention and hormones

Before menopause, it's important to promote your body's natural

hormonal balance so bone growth stays consistent. After menopause,

your body has many natural mechanisms to boost estrogen levels and

maintain bone health.

 

One is to store a little extra weight (that's one of the reasons

that recent weight gain is so stubborn). Estrogen is made and stored

in fat cells, so keeping a few more around is actually good for your

bones. This is one case where thin is not better!

 

Testosterone, a potent steroid hormone, increases muscle mass, which

in turn helps build bone density. After menopause, testosterone can

be one of the substances your body converts into estrogen. (Click

here for a diagram of how hormones are made in your body.) When you

exercise, your body releases testosterone — just one of the reasons

physical activity is a natural antidote to bone loss.

 

But what about women who don't make enough hormones naturally?

 

Osteoporosis, irregular periods and hysterectomy

Much of the information on estrogen and bone loss comes from women

who've undergone a full hysterectomy and received HRT therapy in

their 20's and early 30's — the stage at which they are supposed to

be maximizing bone density .

 

Teenagers and young women who've experienced hormonal deficiencies

characterized by frequent amenhorrhea due to malnutrition, eating

disorders, over-exercising, or other factors are at a greater risk

for osteoporosis for the same reason.

 

These women just haven't had the steady supply of sex hormones to

store up a good base of bone to age with. If any of these factors

sound familiar, talk to your practitioner about your risk of

osteoporosis and the usefulness of a pursuing a course of

bioidentical hormone therapy that includes the proper balance of

estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone.

 

And keep in mind that a risk is just that — a risk — not your

destiny. Instead of worrying so much about bone loss, most women

would benefit by focusing more on natural steps to improving bone

health.

 

Calcium and bone health

Healthy bones store about 99% of the body's calcium; the rest is

used throughout the body for other vital functions. Bones also house

about 85% of the body's phosphorous and 50% of the body's total

sodium and magnesium.

 

Calcium is one of the most important minerals in the body, not only

for bone health but for other physiological functions, including

nerve transmission, blood clotting, muscle growth and contraction,

heart function, hormone function, and metabolism.

 

But calcium makes you work for it. It requires a lot of digestive

teamwork, including the presence of stomach acid, a whole alphabet

of vitamins, magnesium, other essential minerals, and a well-

functioning GI tract to deliver calcium's many benefits. If you have

deficiencies anywhere along the line, it won't matter how much

calcium you eat, your body will take it (and whatever other minerals

it needs) from your bones. This usually shows up first in non-vital

areas like your teeth, hair, and nails.

 

To test how easily your calcium supplement breaks down in a healthy

stomach, put it in a glass of vinegar and stir occasionally. It

should dissolve completely in twelve hours.

 

Bones release calcium by upping the rate of resorption. Whatever

doesn't get used gets excreted through the kidneys — this is why

doctors test your urine for calcium as one marker of bone loss. In

Chinese medicine the bones are said to be ruled by the kidneys, so

interlocked are their functions.

 

But increasing calcium is not the answer: too much is as problematic

as too little, causing other difficulties, like kidney stones,

gallstones and hypercalcemia. Our American diets have plenty of

available calcium and we still have osteoporosis — what many of us

lack is the ability to successfully use the calcium we get.

 

If you have GI issues, including IBS or celiac disease, you can't

absorb the calcium you need from your food. Older women often lack

the digestive acids necessary to break down calcium. Ironically,

women are told that antacids like Tums are good calcium supplements —

but antacids oppose the very stomach acid (hydrochloric acid)

needed for calcium absorption. Protonics, like Nexium, have the same

problem.

 

Nutrition and calcium absorption

Vitamin D is crucial to moving calcium from the small intestine into

the bloodstream, in conjunction with stomach acids and other

vitamins. In one study up to 30-40% of older patients with hip

fractures had a vitamin D deficiency or insufficiency. Maybe the

real health risk for bone fractures is vitamin D deficiency, not low

bone density! (For more information on the importance of vitamin D,

please see our article.)

 

Magnesium increases calcium absorption from the blood into the bone.

Dairy products contain little magnesium and alcohol depletes it.

Ironically, too much calcium blocks the absorption of magnesium,

leading to a deficiency characterized by hair loss, muscle cramps,

irritability, trembling, and disorientation.

 

A good balance between calcium and phosphorous (about 5:1) is

crucial to bone strength, but too much phosphorous depletes calcium.

Soda and red meat — two staples of the American diet — are full of

this mineral, so much so that now some sodas have extra calcium to

counteract the deleterious effect of drinking so much phosphorous.

 

Trace minerals like boron, selenium, copper, silicon, manganese, and

zinc are also important in supporting the healthy balance that makes

bone. For an in-depth explanation of all this and more, I encourage

you to read two wonderful books: Annemarie Colbin's Food and Our

Bones and Miriam Nelson's Strong Women, Strong Bones.

 

Good calcium digestion is dependent on a lot of other factors too,

but I'll cover only two other substances here because of their

prescription use in osteoporosis treatment: calcitonin and

parathyroid hormone. The former is secreted by the thyroid gland,

the latter by the parathyroid gland.

 

Calcitonin stabilizes high levels of calcium by inhibiting

osteoclast activity (the agents in bone resorption). It's now

available as a prescription nasal spray but is most effective in

women who have osteoporosis as a result of corticosteroid use. It

causes nasal irritation, headache and joint pain.

 

Parathyroid hormone (PTH) is normally triggered by high levels of

phosphorous in the blood with corresponding low levels of calcium.

Daily injections seem to stimulate bone formation and are being used

to treat women with severe osteoporosis. High doses of the

medication caused bone cancer in rats so treatment is not

recommended for more than two years.

 

Osteoporosis and inflammation

An emerging area of study is the relationship between bone loss and

blood acidity. It has been known for a while that vegetarians and

women eating a low-protein diet have a lower rate of bone loss. What

hasn't been understood is why.

 

New studies are showing that high levels of the pro-inflammatory

blood acid called homocysteine double the risk of osteoporosis-

related fractures. It has also been linked to other inflammatory

conditions like heart attack, stroke, and Alzheimer's disease.

 

A recent report published recently in the New England Journal of

Medicine asserted that elevated homocysteine levels inhibit new bone

formation by interrupting the cross-linking of collagen fibers in

bone tissue. It's also possible that the body tries to neutralize

acidic blood serum (i.e. low pH) by releasing more bone calcium.

Homocysteine levels can also be stabilized by taking a vitamin

supplement with folic acid, B12 and B6.

 

Be aware that a minority of the population can't convert folic acid

due to a genetic factor. If your homocysteine levels remain high

even after a few weeks of B supplementation, you may want to ask

your practitioner about adding a more bioavailable form of folate

called 5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate to your diet.

 

Other foods that cause blood acidity are refined carbohydrates and

simple sugars — yet another reason to minimize these unhealthy foods

in your diet.

 

So, if we know that all this and more go into the proper balance of

bone formation and resorption — and one function can't thrive

without the other — why is mainstream medicine so skewed to the side

of drugs for osteoporosis?

 

The benefits and risks of Fosamax and other bisphosphonates

The original use of bisphosophonates — the class of drugs that

includes Fosamax (alendronate), and Actonel (risedronate), was

industrial: corrosion prevention, laundry soaps, and fertilizer.

They were used primarily in the textile and oil industries.

 

Scientists only discovered that bisphosphonates inhibit bone

resorption in the late 1960's. Bone density tests proved that the

drugs increased bone density as long as they were taken regularly.

The FDA approved Fosamax for use in the treatment and prevention of

osteoporosis in 1995 — the year after osteopenia was created as a

medical condition. Sales are now in the billions of dollars a year.

 

There have been no studies on how these drugs affect bone health and

overall health in long-term use. The longest study spanned ten

years, during which time half of the test population dropped out

citing difficulty in following the protocol and negative side

effects. And now that we know that inhibiting bone loss also

inhibits new bone growth — it's possible that we are creating a

generation of women with dense but old and brittle bone. And the

alendronate in Fosamax actually remains in your bones. Who knows

what the long-term effects are of that?

 

Since almost half of women over 50 are alleged by conventional

medicine to be at risk for osteoporosis, it seems we are in the

midst of yet another grand public experiment, the scale of which

rivals the early days of HRT. The FDA is now considering approval of

Fosamax for pediatric use. If most of our bone growth happens as

children and teenagers, I can't imagine what the long-term effects

might be of inhibiting that process at an early age.

 

Merck, the parent company of Fosamax (as well as Vioxx) claims that

its drug is safe if taken as directed (upon rising, with a full

glass of water at least 30-60 minutes before breakfast during which

time you must stay upright to minimize the unpleasant side effects).

Inflammation of the esophagus and stomach lining can occur if you

lie down too soon after taking the pill. Merck asserts that long-

term use of Fosamax has no ill affect.

 

While this may be true for some women, the side effects of Fosamax

for others appear to worsen quickly — some women complain of

debilitating indigestion and stomach pain in as little as three

days. Other women taking Fosamax for longer periods report serious

bone and joint pain and decreased mobility (perhaps a side effect of

increased bone mineralization with no new bone growth?).

 

This all supports our argument that each person reacts to drugs in

an individual way. For a fascinating look at side effects and

ratings of Fosamax from women who are on it, please click on this

discussion group about Fosamax.

 

But the inflammatory effect of Fosamax is surfacing. A 1993 report

discovered that a small percentage of bisphosphonate users

experienced serious eye problems that could lead to vision loss; 33%

of the study group complained of blurred vision. More troubling is

the small group of people in a recent study who were on

corticosteroids and then Fosamax-like drugs: 1 in 12 experienced

bone death (osteonecronosis) in their jaws.

 

I see the troubling risks of Fosamax use borne out in my practice

all the time. I'm beginning to think there is a subset of the

population which has a very difficult time with heavy metals; their

bodies don't cleanse, or chelate the metals from their systems and

so these toxins accumulate in their muscle, fat, and bone tissue. It

is my theory that in some women, bone fragility may stem from a

burden of heavy metals like aluminum and mercury that actually bind

to the bone tissue, usurping calcium in the bone's core structure,

and severely weakening it.

 

When these women are put on Fosamax, without addressing their other

systemic issues, they face a steady downward spiral that begins with

worsening GI issues and culminates in debilitating joint and bone

pain and general metabolic/physical degeneration. In a mainstream

medical practice, this domino effect will lead to more

prescriptions — NSAIDS for pain, protonics like Nexium and Prilosec

for digestive issues, and Lipitor for high cholesterol. While these

medications may control symptoms in the short-term, they do nothing

to treat the underlying issues.

 

More to the point, there is practically no long-term research being

done on the safety of combining these drugs with Fosamax. According

to one limited study of Fosamax and naproxen (a popular NSAID

prescribed for arthritis pain), 38% of users developed stomach

ulcers and 69% experienced serious side effects, leading the authors

to conclude that the drugs had a synergistic effect that promoted

gastric ulcers. If you understand that bone health depends on your

stomach's ability to digest protein, calcium and minerals, you can

see how very detrimental this is.

 

The inflammatory nature of bisphosphonates makes sense when you

think that this is a class of drug in the same family as cleansing

powders! What's more, most of these women are paying a hefty monthly

price for this treatment. The average cost of a month's prescription

of Fosamax is $65.00. Multiply that by the millions of post-

menopausal women who are expected to be on the medication for

anywhere from 20-30 years, and you see why the drug companies are so

anxious to maintain the current atmosphere of paranoia about

osteoporosis.

 

If reading the news about Vioxx and other drug recalls is not enough

to convince you that pharmaceutical companies have their bottom line

at heart, not the public's interest, consider this quote from FDA

employee and whistleblower Dr. David Graham:

 

" But, when there are unsafe drugs, the FDA is very likely to err on

the side of industry. Rarely will they keep a drug from being

marketed or pull a drug off the market… There's no incentive for the

companies to do things right. The clinical trials that are done are

too small, and as a result it's very unusual to find a serious

safety problem in these clinical trials. Safety flaws are discovered

after the drug gets on the market. "

 

He ends with the simple fact that in order for a drug to get FDA

approval, it only needs to be more effective than a sugar pill.

 

The truth is that the two most important things you can do for your

bones — eating well and daily exercise — can't be marketed by big

companies for profit: walking is free and you have to eat anyway.

Even the highest medical-grade vitamin supplement costs less per

month than a prescription for Fosamax and you get a lot more bang

for your buck without the risks; quality supplements work from the

inside out to support a host of body functions in addition to bone

health.

 

I think it's high time we stop being guinea pigs for the sake of

drug-based medicine. We need to accept responsibility for our health

and make the lifestyle changes necessary to nurture it.

 

What if you are already taking Fosamax?

If you've been taking Fosamax, don't stop suddenly. Talk to your

doctor about your concerns and discuss other forms of osteoporosis

prevention. You can begin to educate yourself about your options

and, most importantly, change your diet and exercise regularly.

 

As your bones begin to benefit from your new changes, you may find

you can stop your prescription in confidence. If you have already

received a diagnosis of osteoporosis, consider it a wake-up call to

take action. Osteoporosis is a preventable and reversible condition,

it just takes a little work. Here's where to begin.

 

The Women to Women approach

Your bones, including your hair, teeth and nails, are mirrors of

what you put into your body and the balance in your life. At Women

to Women, we encourage our patients to try a combination approach to

preventing and treating osteoporosis that begins with optimal

nutrition. In short, this means:

 

Take a daily medical-grade nutritional supplement rich in the

minerals and nutrients that support bone health. Your vitamin should

contain calcium and magnesium, vitamins A, D, K and B6, B12, folic

acid and essential fatty acids. A calcium supplement is only as good

as its rate of absorption, so buy the best quality you can afford.

Exercise daily; include weight-training exercises at least twice a

week. Bones are kept healthy with use! The more you ask of them, the

stronger they'll become, especially if you feed them well.

Eat a balanced diet rich in leafy green vegetables, fruit, whole

grains and seaweed products. These are much richer sources of

calcium and vitamins than dairy products. If you consume dairy, try

to buy organic.

Have protein as part of every meal and snack, but don't overdo it.

Avoid refined carbohydrates and simple sugars. Minimize sodas and

limit caffeine too—both are bone weakeners.

Include healthy fats in every meal. Bone building vitamins A, D and

K are fat-soluble and a certain amount of fat is needed for proper

hormone and immune function.

Maintain hormonal balance during perimenopause. This is critical to

healthy bone formation. Healthy adrenal balance is especially

important. And if you get a low bone density reading, have your

hormones checked, including your free and total testosterone levels.

Support your body's detoxification functions, especially for your

liver.

Maintain a healthy ratio of body fat: 20-25% body fat is normal.

Get some daily sun exposure to trigger natural production of vitamin

D, at least 15 minutes of unprotected sun in the early morning and

evening.

Get a baseline bone density scan in your 40's if you have any of the

risk factors for osteoporosis. That way you'll have something to

compare yourself to later on. After 65, continue to get bone scans

every couple of years to check your own individual progress.

Examine your feelings about aging and weakness. Strength comes in

many forms. Don't let other people's definitions limit you and your

experience.

Listen to your body and respect its desire to heal itself—in many

ways it often knows best and may need just a little more support.

I recently saw a patient in her 50's who had first come to me two

years ago with a diagnosis of osteoporosis — she was 2.7 standard

deviations below the norm. But her real problem was the " superwoman

syndrome " : adrenal exhaustion from over-work, neglected nutrition,

and putting herself last. I told her she could overcome her

osteoporosis if she worked at it. And she has — her latest BMD shows

her above the norm.

 

Solid bones need support

In the end, osteoporosis is only as frightening as the power we give

it. With some attention to your diet, a medical-grade supplement,

and a few healthy lifestyle changes, most women can prevent, treat,

even reverse bone loss without drugs and their side effects.

 

In Chinese medicine, osteoporosis is considered a physical

manifestation of not feeling supported in life. Ask yourself if

there is a relationship there to how you feel in your life.

 

Our youth-obsessed culture tends to undermine our self-esteem as we

age rather than celebrate what we have learned and accomplished. As

we continue on the amazing journey of life, maybe we can begin to

see that time will actually make us stronger if we let it. And with

the right support, our bones will help carry the load.

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