A fresh look at bone health
Saturday, August 13, 2011 at 3:24PM
Skip Hellewell in bones, calcium, healthy change

The quick answer:  The modern epidemic of osteoporosis, like coronary artery disease, is the natural result of an unnatural lifestyle—too much meat, sugar, and processed foods and too little use of the muscles. 

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American women worry about osteoporosis.  They should worry.  There’s nothing nice about stooped-over posture, the dowager’s hump, or a life-shortening broken hip.  Osteoporosis is a big problem and in the American way, treatment has become a big business.  Unfortunately the money spent on treatment—like calcium supplements and drugs—hasn’t solved the problem.  In this post we take a fresh look at bone health and talk about prevention.  Warning:  Most of what you've been told may be wrong. 

An Old Theory Revisited

The current calcium theory of osteoporosis calls for more calcium in the diet and this has carried over into government guidance.  Americans consume more calcium than any nation, yet we are advised to take more.  Problem is that while we consume more calcium, we still have one of the highest rates of osteoporosis.  This doesn’t make sense.  There’s another theory—call it the acid/alkaline theory—that’s been around since 1968 though largely ignored, perhaps because there’s no pill to sell. 

The Lancet, published in England, is a prestigious medical journal.  Over 40 years ago it carried a revolutionary article by two Harvard researchers, Amnon Wachman and Daniel Bernstein, titled “Diet and osteoporosis.”  The article offered evidence that osteoporosis was the natural result of the modern acid-producing diet, not of too little calcium. 

Another Harvard researcher, D. Mark Hedsted in a 2001 American Journal of Clinical Nutrition commentary “Fractures, calcium, and the modern diet” (you can read it here), made these points:

  1. Questioning the guidance to eat more calcium, Hedsted asked:  “Why do populations with low-calcium diets have fewer fractures than do those with high intake?”
  2. He further observed:  “the long-standing recommendations to increase calcium intakes [though this may increase bone density] appear to have had little or no effect on the prevalence of osteoporosis or fractures in the United States.”
  3. Hedsted also noted the link between heart disease and osteoporosis—when one increases, the other follows.  This pattern is seen in country after country—what’s good for the heart is also good for the bones, and vice-versa. 

Acid/alkaline Theory

To better understand the acid/alkaline theory of osteoporosis, here are a few bone facts:

Building strong bones:

How does the body build strong bones?  Our knowledge is incomplete, but here are some key factors:

Summary:

Monitoring your bone health is like watching a glacier move, you need to take a long view.  There is much we don’t know and that likely won’t be known in our lifetime.  The best strategy then is to optimize bone formation and minimize the breakdown of bone to preserve blood pH.  Fortunately, the Word of Wisdom lifestyle works for both.


In the next post we'll discuss muscle-building exercises.  If you suffer from osteoporosis consult your doctor.  Be patient in adding exercises—try to avoid injury; see this as a marathon not a sprint. 

Budget Wisdom:  You don't need a fancy gym—gravity is free.  Jumping rope or climbing stairs is good for the legs.  Push-ups and pull-ups are good for the arms and shoulders.  A walker passed the house while I was working in the yard.  In conversation he said he does his age in push-ups.  I was impressed as he was in his 70s, though he looks younger.  Picking up small children counts too; as they get older you'll get stronger.  (They'll make you stop about the time they get to high school.)  The key is to incorporate into your daily life things that are harder than usual, and then do them for years and years. 

Comments:  Please share your experience with bone health.  What do your doctors recommend?  What works best for you?  What do you do to build and preserve muscle.

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Article originally appeared on Word of Wisdom living (http://www.wordofwisdomliving.com/).
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