Strong Bones - The Ultimate Anti-Aging Strategy
By John Burgstiner
Founder/President of Logos Nutritionals, LLC
Picture
in your mind a forty year old woman in her prime standing tall and
proud before a crowd to receive an award. Now picture the same woman
forty years later. She hobbles around, hunched over a cane and barely
able to speak since she had her last stroke. What caused the gradual
thinning of her bones and thickening of her arteries? Why does she have
kidney stones, bone spurs and painful, swollen joints? What could she
have done to prevent all this misery? One of the defining benchmarks of
the aging process is the progressive movement of calcium and other
minerals out of the bone (demineralization) and into the soft tissues
of the body (calcification). Before we can understand the link between
weak bones and aging, osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, diabetes,
hormonal imbalances and a host of other ailments, we need to first
understand the critical roles our bones play in our health:
When
you look at a skeleton you get the impression that bones are hard,
solid and static or unchanging (in fact the word skeleton comes from
the Greek word "skeletos", meaning "dried up"). Nothing could be
further from the truth. Bones are indeed the second hardest substance
in the human body (enamel is hardest), but they are neither solid nor
static. Their internal structure is more like a honeycomb - a solid
matrix (of protein, collagen and minerals) dotted with small holes. The
minerals provide rigidity to the bone matrix while the protein and
collagen provide some flexibility. Bones typically become more brittle
as we age due to a loss of bone density as the bone matrix is
progressively depleted of minerals. However, as we shall see, this does
not have to be the case.
Osteoporosis - A modern epidemic
The World Health Organization defines osteoporosis as extremely low
bone density - 2.5 standard deviations (SD) below "normal", which they
set as the average peak bone mass of healthy young white women. In 1994
a new "precursor" condition of osteopenia (1-2.5 SD below normal) was
introduced. According to the WHO definition, more than 70% of all women
over age 50 have either osteoporosis or osteopenia. The National
Osteoporosis Foundation's 2005 Annual Report calls osteoporosis a
"major public health threat for an estimated 44 million Americans, or
55 percent of the people 50 years of age or older." It is a "silent
disease" that progresses without any outward sign until a sufferer has
a fracture.
This is a national health crisis that is not going away soon. In fact,
the problem is growing exponentially as the baby boomer generation
enters its golden years. The good news is that osteoporosis is
absolutely preventable and to some extent reversible, but only if one
is willing to learn how to eliminate those activities and foods that
contribute to bone loss. More good news: eliminating those foods and
activities will also greatly reduce your chances of developing a host
of degenerative illnesses, especially if you supplement your diet with
appropriate bone building nutrients in the correct proportions.
How and why does bone loss happen?
Skeletons may conjure up images of death, but our 206 bones are in fact
living organs. Once they stop growing in size, they undergo constant
repair and maintenance in a process known as remodeling. Remodeling is
a two-part process. In part one (resorption), specialized cells called
osteoclasts seek out bone tissue that has become weak or damaged and
secrete an acid that dissolves the bone matrix, releasing calcium,
magnesium and other minerals into the blood. In part two
(mineralization), osteoblasts deposit new minerals and collagen into
the areas that have been cleared. This is a much slower process, taking
three to 18 months to complete, depending on one's age.
Early in life, mineralization outpaces resorption and our bones grow
fast and strong, but then we enter a period where they are relatively
equal (peak bone mass - twenties to early thirties) and eventually (if
we do not choose to intervene with appropriate supplementation)
inevitable and progressive bone loss sets in. Unfortunately for women,
bone loss accelerates in the years surrounding menopause from a typical
1% to as much as 5% a year, so that the aforementioned elderly woman
might have only 50% of her peak bone mass left. Not only is she at
increased risk of heart disease and hip and other fractures, but
depleted mineral stores along with her poor diet and failing digestion
have greatly accelerated the aging process.
Bones are much more than a storage depot!
Bone remodeling is precisely controlled by hormones secreted by glands
that directly or indirectly influence the major homeostatic control
mechanisms in the body. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) is secreted by the
parathyroid gland and stimulates osteoclasts to pull calcium from
bones, while calcitonin (CT) is secreted by the thyroid gland and
stimulates osteoblasts to deposit calcium into bones.
Remodeling is a critical feature of our incredible design in terms of
our ability to regulate bodily functions such as blood pH, heart rate,
and blood pressure in response to environmental and dietary changes.
The bones act as an on demand storehouse of alkaline minerals which are
accessed as needed to neutralize acid wastes, activate enzyme systems,
and to regulate muscle contractions, blood clotting and nerve signaling.
This is why pharmaceutical solutions to bone loss (an estimated six
billion dollar market) such as bisphosphonates (i.e.- Fosamax, Actonel)
are so insidious. Anti-resorption drugs may temporarily slow bone loss
by shutting down osteoclast activity, but the critical health
regulating aspects of bone remodeling are forfeited in the process (not
to mention bone maintenance and integrity or the host of nasty side
effects from gastric reflux to osteonecrosis of the jaw, a condition in
which part or all of the jawbone dies). Parathryoid drugs (i.e.-
Teraparatide) can stimulate bone growth, but they may also produce some
severe side effects, from hypercalcemia to osteosarcoma (bone cancer).
Measuring Bone Loss
Proponents of bone density testing claim that DEXA machines are the
gold standard for measuring bone health, but questions persist as to
their validity. The problem is that no national or international
standard for measuring peak bone mass has been accepted to date, and
readings vary widely from brand to brand, making comparisons of
different test results meaningless. Furthermore, bone mass varies with
age, ethnicity, country (and even regions within countries), diet, and
season - it is lower in the winter than in summer.
Predicting Fracture
Risk Along with expensive and dangerous drugs, bone mineral density
(BMD) testing has been heavily promoted as a means to predict and
prevent fractures. However, as a 1997 review by the British Columbia
Health Technology Assessment Agency states, "Even the most favorable
reports on the effectiveness of BMD testing reveal that low bone
density alone does not accurately identify women who will go on to
fracture as they age."
Accurately predicting fracture risk requires that many other factors
are considered, including family history, diet and lifestyle issues,
and especially body weight. It turns out that putting on those few
extra pounds on the hips gives women a protective effect from fractures
in two ways:
1) Even if they don't exercise, their bones are getting more resistance
and thus respond by conserving bone mass.
2) Their fat cells produce estrogen, which has a bone sparing effect.
According to a recent NIH report, 80% of women aged 75 or older would
rather die than experience a hip fracture that lands them in a nursing
home. Other Factors in Bone Loss Bone loss is certainly a natural part
of the aging process, but in addition to genetics, there are a number
of other lifestyle and dietary factors that can lead to intensified
bone loss:
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