Osteoporosis' Tests, Vitamins, and More

Exercise, vitamin D and calcium, and proper testing help those at risk for osteoporosis — and won’t break the bank.

If you have osteoporosis — or are at high risk — odds are you’re not getting the care you need.

A Stanford study determined that more than half of all people with osteoporosis remain undiagnosed. What’s more, even high-risk patients — such as those who have already had a hip fracture – often don’t receive calcium and vitamin D supplements or antiosteoporosis drugs. While a surgeon general’s report on bone health adds that most physicians don’t even discuss osteoporosis with their patients after a fracture, data show that a women’s risk of hip fracture is equal to her combined risk of breast, uterine and ovarian cancer.

Causes of Osteoporosis[1]

Are you searching for what causes osteoporosis? You may be surprised to learn that many factors contribute to osteoporosis. For instance, a decrease in estrogen at menopause is one cause. There is also a genetic component. If your mother or grandmother had osteoporosis, the chances are higher for you to have it too. Eating a diet that’s low in calcium, getting little exercise, and smoking cigarettes also contribute to getting osteoporosis.

Read the Causes of Osteoporosis article > >[2]

Michael Holick, MD, PhD, professor of medicine, physiology, and biophysics at Boston University Medical Center said that “only one in four women between the ages of 45 and 75 will ever talk to a doctor about osteoporosis.”

What’s tragic about those numbers is that it’s relatively easy and cost effective to take care of your bones — but it can be devastating when you don’t. Osteoporosis causes[3] about 2 million fractures every year. If you’re a woman older than 50, you have 50-50 odds of having an osteoporosis-related fracture sometime in your remaining lifetime (don’t stop reading if you’re a man: your chance of a similar fracture is one in four).

Here are some things you can do to help protect your bones without breaking the bank — especially if you’re at high risk for osteoporosis, or nearing an age at which you will be.

Get Cs and Ds: Calcium and vitamin D, that is. A study of postmenopausal women on osteoporosis treatment[4] shows that 52% had vitamin D insufficiency — even though they’d been told by their doctors to take calcium and vitamin D.

In 2010, the Institute of Medicine issued new recommendations for how much daily calcium and vitamin D most people need. Most adults, the IOM says, should be getting between 600 and 800 international units (IUs) of vitamin D every day, and between 1,000 and 1,300 miligrams (mg) of calcium daily (with the higher levels for postmenopausal women, adolescent girls, and women who are pregnant or lactating).

“To prevent skin cancer, we’re avoiding sun exposure, which is a major source of vitamin D,” Holick says.  Fortified dairy products, egg yolks, fish, and liver contain vitamin D, but some people may need a supplement to ensure they get enough. There are many dietary sources of calcium, including not just a variety of dairy products, but fortified cereals and juices, dark leafy greens like bok choy and broccoli, and almonds.

Exercise: Here’s the good news: The best exercise for maintaining your bone mass costs you nothing, other than maybe a good pair of shoes. It’s walking, as little as 3-5 miles a week.

“The pounding on the pavement as you walk increases muscle tone and maintains bone density,” says Holick. “No other type of exercise does this as well.”

If you’re looking to increase (not just maintain) bone density, you can’t hope to increase your bone density through exercise — not unless you stress yourself abnormally (think super weightlifter-type workouts) — but it can help you keep the bone that you have. Jogging, stair climbing, and other types of weight-bearing exercise are also effective.

Strength training[5] is the other half of the exercise equation. It maintains and possibly even improves bone mineral density[6], according to several studies, according to results from the Bone, Estrogen, and Strength (BEST) study funded by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS).

You don’t have to join a pricey gym to get strength-training benefits. A few inexpensive hand weights or a rubber tubing used for resistance exercises are all you need. A simple program with one or two exercises for each muscle group is fine. Ask your doctor for some sample exercises.

Be sure to check with your doctor before starting any exercise program, especially if you’ve had falls, fractures, or other injuries.

Testing: Bone density screening is the best way to assess the health of your bones. But will your insurance coverage pay for it? The answer is yes and no, says Holick. “If you’re 50 to 55 years of age and perimenopausal, bone density screening provides an important baseline, but insurance coverage is spotty.”

Many insurers won’t cover bone density screening for women under 65 (the age at which the National Osteoporosis Foundation recommends  screening begin for all women) unless you have one or more additional risk factors. Be sure your doctor and your insurer know if you have any of these risk factors:

  • Being postmenopausal, and/or early onset of menopause
  • Smoking
  • Family history of osteoporosis or fractures
  • Low weight/having a thin frame
  • Using corticosteroids for longer than three months
  • Late onset of menstrual periods
  • History of anorexia or bulimia
  • Excessive alcohol intake
  • Low intake of calcium or vitamin D
  • Taking certain medications, such as some cancer drugs, thyroid drugs, and anticonvulsants-ask your doctor

References^

Causes of Osteoporosis (www.webmd.com)^ Read the Causes of Osteoporosis article > > (www.webmd.com)^ Osteoporosis causes (www.webmd.com)^ osteoporosis treatment (www.webmd.com)^ Strength training (www.webmd.com)^ bone mineral density (www.webmd.com)^ exercise program (www.webmd.com)

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