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Debunking the Top Six Myths About Osteoporosis
By Susan E. Brown, PhD Director, Center of Better Bones and The Better Bones Foundation

Worried by what you hear about bone loss and osteoporosis? You don't need to be; much of what we're told about bone health is actually a myth. In reality, there's a lot you can do at any point to build bone strength, prevent osteoporosis, and reduce fracture risk. Let's set the record straight:

Myth 1: Lack of calcium causes osteoporosis.
Yes, calcium is important, but it's a myth that simply taking a high amount of calcium will guarantee bone health. To protect your bones, you need enough of 19 additional essential bone nutrients, not just calcium. In fact, you need some of those nutrients just to get any benefits of calcium. For example, without enough vitamin D, your body only absorbs about 10- 15% of the calcium from your diet, but when you take enough, the absorption rate jumps to 30-40%. Other critical nutrients for bone health are vitamin K, magnesium. manganese, zinc, copper, strontium, boron, vitamin C, vitamin B12, and folic acid.

Myth 2: Osteoporosis is normal; as your bones age they should get weak.
One of the most dangerous bone health myths is that osteoporosis is inevitable as we age. While there are some fixed risk factors — such as our age and gender — you can control most of the risk factors that lead to excessive bone loss, osteoporosis, and fracture. The truth is, you can maintain and rebuild strong bones at any age.

Myth 3: A diagnosis of osteoporosis means you'll suffer a fracture.
Research shows that the vast majority of those who fracture do not have an "osteoporotic" bone density; they have either osteopenia or normal bone density. Also, many people with an "osteoporotic" bone density never fracture. Real facture risk depends not on bone density, but on one's "total load" of bone-weakening risk factors.

Myth 4: You don't need to worry about osteoporosis until menopause.
Bone loss — even osteoporosis — can be secretly effecting you in your 20s, 30s, and 40s. We normally achieve peak bone mass in our 20s and then begin to lose it, some of us more quickly than others. Early bone loss commonly takes place in women who are very thin, have digestive problems or celiac disease, experience irregular menstrual cycles, have poor nutrition, or use bone-depleting medications such as steroid drugs.

Myth 5: There's nothing you can do once you have osteoporosis other than take a drug.
The U.S. Surgeon General recommends much more than drugs! In fact, in 2004 the Surgeon General provided a pyramid outlining the best ways to promote bone health and prevent osteoporosis and fracture. The first steps in the pyramid are the natural approach to bone health combining nutrition, physical activity, and fall prevention. Next comes assessing and treating the underlying causes of compromised bone health. Finally, bone drugs are listed as a last recourse.

Myth 6: There aren't any signs or symptoms of bone loss.
While many women don't realize they have a bone issue until they fracture, there are early signs and symptoms of bone loss. These include receding gums; decreased grip strength; weak and brittle fingernails; cramps, muscle aches and bone pain; height loss and low overall fitness. Another good way to know if you are losing bone is to test your first morning urine pH level to see if your body is too acidic. Metabolic acidosis can deplete your bone mass systematically. Alkalizing through diet and supplements preserves bone.

Keeping these facts about bone loss, osteoporosis and fracture in mind, you can take steps to have better bones now and for life. A good first step is to supplement with the Better Bones Builder, a comprehensive 44 nutrient all-in-one multivitamin-mineral-amino acid formula. The Better Bones Builder covers all your daily needs, plus includes all the 20 key bone nutrients in alkalizing forms and therapeutic doses.

Why should you avoid osteoporosis drugs?
1 You'll put your bones at long-term risk.
Bone drugs have troubling side effects that can significantly affect your bone health, especially when used over time. One troubling side effect is seen with bisphosphonate drugs. While they may halt bone breakdown in the short term, after about a year, these bone drugs also halt bone building — leading to brittle bones that may be more susceptible to fracture, not less. How's that for irony?

2 There are risks to your whole body.
Serious consequences like stomach irritation, heightened risk of esophageal cancer, blood clots, leg cramps, vision changes, nausea, vomiting, or constipation. These side effects are critically important to consider, especially if you're being asked by your doctor to take bone drugs for what may be normal bone loss or even as prevention.

3 Bone drugs produce few lasting results.
Popular bisphosphonate bone drugs "work" by temporarily creating bone mass from drug molecules, but they don't offer lasting results. Based on my experience, I've learned that just because bones may look denser on a bone scan, it doesn't necessarily mean they are measurably stronger. What's more, the recommended limit for taking bone drugs safely is just five years, at which time any "benefits" of bisphosphonates disappear.


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