Heavy weights is recommended for osteopenia. Read the Liftmor studies. Light weights are recommended for osteoporosis as your bones can fracture from heavy weights. |
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I'm a sample of 1, but.. I'm 51 and have had osteopenia bordering on osteoporosis for over 20 years (t-score generally around 2.0-2.4, depending on where you measure).
Knock on wood, I have yet to have broken any bones. I'm very active, and over the years experienced several impacts where one would expect broken bones, but...nothing. I do supplement with vitamins D and K (I tend to be vitamin D deficient). I'm honestly not sold on bone density and bone resilience being the same thing. |
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1.8 spine t score
1.3 lumbar t score For now adding: 10K Vit D + K2 5x/wk (vs 50K D2 only 1x/week) and weights. I got out of the habit during Covid. But was mostly very active in terms of cardio, not weights before. |
| Solution: Hormone replacement the minute menopause starts !! |
I believe HRT has kept me mostly stable, but my numbers are just barely creeping up. It has to be HRT + resistance training with increasing heavy weights. |
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Osteopenia in my femur and hip. Wrist and spine are normal. My doctor recommended a calcium supplement on days where I don't get enough in my diet, and added a vitamin D supplement when my bloodwork came back a little low. I had already started to weight train right around the time my DEXA was done or she would have recommended that too.
She also ordered a 24 hour urine collection to test for calcium which I put off forever because who wants to spend the weekend peeing into a bottle you have saved in your refrigerator. But I finally just completed it and it was normal. |