|
(866) 998-8855
 |
 |
|
|
 |
Back to Articles Bones: How to Build Strong Bones
How to Build Strong Bones
It used to be when a woman was in her forties
or fifties, she would be routinely put on
hormone replacement therapy (HRT), told to
pop a few Tums, eat more dairy products, and
sent home. No mention of consuming foods
rich in bone-building vitamins and minerals.
And probably no mention of the importance
of exercise. Prescribing HRT was once
convenient, quick, and—now that doctors
know better—medical malpractice.
In July 2002, the National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute of the
National Institutes of Health
stopped early a major clinical trial of
the risks and benefits of combined
estrogen and progestin in healthy
menopausal women due to an
increased risk of invasive breast cancer
and other health complications. The
study, which was scheduled to run until
2005, was stopped after an average follow-
up of 5.2 years. The large multicenter
trial, a component of the
Women’s Health Initiative, also found
increases in coronary heart disease,
stroke, and pulmonary embolism in
study participants on estrogen plus
progestin compared to women taking
placebo pills. There were noteworthy
benefits of estrogen plus progestin,
including fewer cases of hip fractures
and colon cancer, but on balance the
harm was greater than the benefit.
There is a silver lining in this cloud,
however. The use of HRT never was by
any means the entire story of preventing
and reversing osteoporosis or maintaining
heart health. Perhaps now women’s
doctors will help patients to go beyond
HRT and rediscover that a healthy diet
rich in a wide range of bone-building
nutrients, smart use of nutritional supplements
and consistent exercise remain
the key to long-term bone health.
OSTEOPOROSIS DESTROYS
QUALITY OF LIFE
Osteoporosis is one of the most serious
and common diseases faced by women
and, to a much lesser extent, by men.
Also known as “brittlebone
disease,” osteoporosis
causes loss of bone mass
and flexibility. This deterioration
in skeletal health,
if left unchecked, can
result in hip fractures, disfiguration,
and restrictions
in physical activity—in all
senses diminishing one’s
quality of life.
Bone loss in women can begin as
early as 35. The loss accelerates in the
eight to ten years prior to menopause
and is especially high immediately after
menopause.
The condition has become much
more prevalent today than ever before.
This is because, in the past, fewer women
lived a significant numbers of years
beyond their reproductive period. At the
turn of the last century, a woman’s average
life expectancy was approximately
50 years. Today it is nearly 80. These
changing demographics have forced the
medical community to examine health challenges women have never before
faced on such a massive scale.
As more women today than ever
before are living beyond their eighties,
osteoporosis has reached epidemic proportions
in the United States, afflicting
15 to 20 million Americans, and causing
each year an estimated 1.3 million fractures
of the vertebrae, hips, forearms,
and other bones in those 45 years of age
and older, with women in their mid-seventies
and older being most vulnerable.
By age 90, one-third of all women will
suffer hip fractures, with death resulting
in up to 20 percent of these, and long-term nursing home care for many others.
In the United States hip fracture
health care costs up to $10 billion annually.
These maladies, together with the
need to treat menopausal symptoms
such as hot flashes and mood swings,
created a burgeoning market for HRT.
But those days are over.
SAFE ALTERNATIVES TO HRT
Diet and exercise are two of the most
powerful “prescriptions” women have
for dealing with osteoporosis.
Furthermore, even if women are using
other non-HRT medical drugs for osteoporosis,
paying special attention to diet
and exercise along with proper nutritional
supplements could help them to
reduce their medication’s dosage, or
eliminate the need for it altogether.MCHC—DOCTOR-PREFERRED
CALCIUM SOURCE
The foundation of any natural bone
health program is calcium. Almost all
women can benefit from a calcium supplement.
Unfortunately, neither doctors
nor women patients usually give
much thought to the form of calcium
they choose. It is important.
Among health professionals, including
medical doctors who have studied
the calcium issue, many say one of the
very best forms of calcium is microcrystalline
hydroxyapatite calcium
(MCHC)—they say it is more effective
in increasing bone thickness than any
other form of calcium, including commonly
supplied calcium gluconate.
This special supplement—found in
Bone Maximizer™ II and Osteoplex
™ (with ipriflavone) from Metabolic
Response Modifiers (MRM)—supplies
calcium in the form it occurs in the
body and is therefore absorbed quickly.
Plus, it provides phosphorus and other
bone-building nutrients, which is very
important (see below).
Our bone cells use protein and other
nutrients to produce collagen. Through
a crystallizing process, minerals such as
calcium, phosphorous, magnesium and
many others attach to the collagen
fibers. This hardens and strengthens
bones. MCHC provides collagen protein and stimulates crystallization processes.
Plus, it’s an excellent source of trace elements
too, like boron, copper, zinc and
silica, also crucial to building strong
bones. Although dietary deficiencies of
these trace elements can lead to
increased risk for osteoporosis, many
women’s diets are deficient in them too.
ABOUT MCHC
Published studies show MCHC:
• Absorbs easily and is similar to the
mineral structure of your bones.
• Appears to reduce osteoporosis
in at-risk men and women.
• Increases bone density.
• Contains the type of collagen protein
that comprises about one-third of
your bones.
• Also provides organic portions of bone.
• Contains the complete mineral matrix
necessary for bone health including:
phosphorus, fluoride, magnesium,
iron, zinc, copper, manganese, and
other trace elements.
• Appears to improve healing of fractures.
• Helps people with osteoporosisrelated
back pain.
• Protects against steroid-induced
bone loss.
Scientific Proof
That MCHC is an extremely beneficial
form of calcium is widely confirmed
in the medical and scientific
literature….
In a study from Current Medical
Research and Opinion, mineral retention
was measured in patients with nutritional
osteomalacia (in which the essential
problem is a lack of available
calcium or phosphorus [or both] for mineralization
of newly formed bones) or
late rickets. “Mineral retention was
markedly enhanced by supplementation
with microcrystalline hydroxyapatite
compound (MCHC),” they reported.
According to a July 1999 report in
the Journal of Reproductive Medicine,
continuous administration of a form of
MCHC “prevents bone loss in postmenopausal
women, suggesting that
this ‘drug’ may be useful in the management
of postmenopausal bone loss.”
This study showed it outperformed calcium
carbonate. (Actually, in the
United States, MCHC is not considered
to be a drug, but rather a nutritional
supplement.)
The aim of a 1995 study, published
in Osteoporosis International, was to
evaluate whether MCHC is more effective
than calcium carbonate in preventing
further bone loss in
postmenopausal women with osteoporosis.
Forty osteoporotic patients
were monitored for 20 months. The
patients were randomly assigned to one
of two groups and treated in a doublemasked
manner with 1400 mg calcium
per day, in the form of either MCHC or
calcium carbonate. After 20 months of
treatment, the difference between the
groups was statistically significant and
showed MCHC “is more effective than
[calcium carbonate] in slowing peripheral
trabecular bone loss in
patients with manifest osteoporosis.”
So when you think of calcium,
think MCHC. It’s a
really good choice.
Beyond calcium, additional
nutrients are critical to your bone
matrix. We mentioned phosphorus.
Most women don’t realize when
they take calcium, this blocks absorption
of phosphorous. According to a
report in the Journal of the American
College of Nutrition (2002;21:239-244),
individuals taking calcium supplements
are at risk of developing phosphorus
deficiency.
In this study, researchers studied the
effect of different levels of calcium
intake on the absorption of phosphorus
by healthy men and women
between the ages of 19 and 78. They
found that for each 500 mg per day
increase in calcium intake, the absorption
of phosphorus decreased by 166
mg per day. “For an elderly person taking
1,500 mg of supplemental calcium
per day, that would translate to
approximately a 45 percent reduction
in the amount of phosphorus
absorbed,” comments physician and
nutrition expert Alan Gaby, M.D.
“Supplementing with large amounts of calcium could lead to a phosphorus
deficiency in people who are consuming
marginal amounts of the mineral.”
To prevent calcium-induced phosphorus
deficiency, the authors of this
study recommend that at least a portion
of an older person’s calcium supplementation
be taken in the form of a
calcium-phosphate preparation,
instead of the more commonly used
calcium carbonate or calcium citrate.
They point out that one of the
most successful clinical studies of calcium
supplementation in elderly people
used such calcium-phosphorous
supplements as the calcium source.
Fortunately, MCHC contains both
calcium and phosphorous in a two-to one
ratio. This makes a supplement
like Bone Maximizer II very unique,so with this supplement we address
these issues, too.
Bone Maximizer II additionally
provides magnesium, zinc, boron, vitamin
D3, vitamin K, vitamin C,
methylsulfonylmethane (MSM), glucosamine,
and horsetail extract (a
source of bioavailable silica), all also
important to bone health.
FYI:
Why Should Your
Bone Health Supplement
Contain Vitamin C & Zinc?
A deficiency of vitamin C is associated with
osteoporosis. Bones cannot be built without
calcium, and the matrix to build bone with calcium
cannot be formed without vitamin C. Although most
people seem to meet at least the minimum needs for
vitamin C, the elderly are more likely to be deficient
in this important vitamin.
Zinc is an important cofactor, together with the
enzyme alkaline phosphatase, in bone
metabolism. Women are most likely to
suffer deficiencies.
Exercise
For women at all stages of life, exercise is essential to skeletal health. That women of all
ages need exercise is as true for daughters as for mothers and grandmothers. University of
North Carolina researchers recently reported very active female college freshmen who also
had a high calcium intake had nearly 17 percent more bone density than their less active
peers with lower calcium intake. Furthermore, female freshmen who exercised at least four
hours a week had even stronger bones; the amount of calcium they consumed was less
important.
If possible and safe, high-intensity strength training is best. Tufts University and
Pennsylvania State University researchers studied the impact of high-intensity strength training
on 40 postmenopausal women whose ages ranged from 50 to 70 years; none of these
women were using estrogen, exercised regularly, or were suffering osteoporosis. One group,
using pneumatic exercise machines for 45 minutes, two days a week, for a year, exercised to
strengthen their hips, knees, back, and abdomen. The other group did not exercise. One year
later, the women who were engaged in the high-intensity exercises exhibited an increase in
bone density in the area of their hips and spine. This is an important finding, as these areas
of women’s bodies are most vulnerable to osteoporosis-related fractures. The women who
did not exercise suffered loss of bone density. The women who exercised also demonstrated
increases in muscle mass, muscle strength, and balance; these improvements help prevent
falls in older women. In this sense, the study demonstrated that exercise might be even
more effective than HRT. While estrogen will certainly help women retain bone density, exercise
not only builds bone density but increases muscle mass, strength and balance; estrogen
does not affect any of these other areas.
Whether your exercise is low-impact aerobics, tennis, light weight resistance, rapid walking,
jogging, hiking, or even pool activity, the point is to exercise consistently three to four times
weekly for at least three to four hours total duration. Start easy. Build up your endurance,
gradually exercising longer periods. You will receive an enormous health dividend. Your body
will feel better. Your mind will feel better.
One of the overall best activities for women is weight-bearing exercise. Women whose
bones have been weakened by osteoporosis, however, must begin an easy and safe exercise
program under medical supervision. Even a slight stress on fragile
bones could result in fracture. If you choose weight-bearing
exercise, you should start with extremely light amounts of
resistance. Be sure to use both Bone Maximizer II and a good
joint health supplement and topical if there is transient soreness.
SYNergy™ Plus from MRM includes both an oral
and topical formula, which provide solid joint support and help
to relieve pain.
We also recommend exercise with water calisthenics. Even
if a woman has arthritis, water therapy is excellent. There won’t be any load on the joints,
and she can lay in the water and kick her feet; even just wading in water provides excellent
resistance. Wading back and forth in four feet of water can even help heal some fractures.
As their bone strength increases, such women can slowly increase the intensity of
their exercise.
|