Image

Tips to Improve your Bone Health [Visual]

Tips to Improve your Bone Health [Visual] | ecogreenlove

Your bone health is key to your overall health and preventing injuries as you age. Bone loss is a natural part of aging that, if left untreated, can lead to weak or brittle bones (osteoporosis). More than 10 million Americans over the age of 50 are currently living with osteoporosis. Fortunately, you can slow bone loss as you age with the right lifestyle changes.

Keep reading to learn more about how your bone health changes as you age and what you can do to prevent osteoporosis.

2–4 minutes

From a young age, your bones are constantly growing and building to form new tissue. Collagen proteins create a framework to build new bone. This framework is filled with minerals — like calcium phosphate — that make bones hard and strong.

Inside your bones, there are specialized cells that help build new tissue and break down old tissue. Osteoblasts help make new bone, while osteoclasts break it down and resorb bone.

Bone is a living tissue that’s always remodeling itself. As you age, the balance between bone buildup and bone breakdown shifts.

  • When you’re a child or teenager, your body creates more bone tissue than it breaks down.
  • When you reach adulthood, the process of bone buildup and breakdown is about equal. This helps maintain your bone mass.
  • After the age of 40, you begin losing bone mass.

For women going through menopause, estrogen helps slow bone breakdown and resorption — without enough estrogen, you begin experiencing more bone loss. Older men are also at risk of losing bone mass due to low estrogen and testosterone levels.

If you lose too much bone mass, you’re more likely to develop osteopenia or osteoporosis. Osteopenia refers to low bone mineral density (BMD), meaning you have less calcium and minerals in your bones. As a result, your bones are weaker than normal.

If osteopenia is left untreated, you’re at risk of develop osteoporosis. This is a bone disease caused by very low BMD and loss of bone mass. You’re more likely to fracture or break a bone with osteoporosis — especially in your wrist, hip, or spine. These breaks can cause severe pain, affect your mobility, and even result in disability.

Osteopenia and osteoporosis are known as “silent conditions” because they don’t cause any symptoms. Unfortunately, you won’t know you have them until you either have a bone density screening test or you break a bone. This is why it’s important to take steps to support your bone health.

  • Take Calcium and Vitamin D Supplements
    Your body can’t make calcium on its own, so it’s important to get the minerals from your diet. You also need vitamin D to help absorb the calcium you eat. Our skin makes some vitamin D when we’re out in the sun, but many people don’t get enough sunlight.
  • Get Regular Exercise
    • Brisk walking, jogging, or running
    • Dancing
    • Playing racket sports like tennis or pickleball
    • Lifting weights, including weight machines, resistance bands, and bodyweight training (like pushups)
    • Balance exercises like tai chi or lunges
  • Avoid Unhealthy Lifestyle Choices
    By quitting smoking, limiting your alcohol intake and eating more bone-boosting foods, you help slow bone loss. You’ll also improve your overall health.
Why You Should Pay Attention to Bone Health as You Get Older[Visual] | ecogreenlove

As we age, we break down more bone tissue than we form. This means we're at risk for weak, brittle bones.

Women aren't the only ones at risk of developing bone problems with older age – men can also develop osteoporosis.

Osteoporosis increases your risk of bone fractures or breaks, which can lead to pain and disability.

You won't experience any symptoms of osteoporosis until you fracture or break a bone.

WAYS TO TAKE CARE OF YOUR BONE HEALTH AS YOU AGE:

• Take calcium and vitamin D supplements as recommended
• Get plenty of exercise, including walking, jogging, or weightlifting
• Quit smoking and limit your alcohol consumption
Visual by Health Perch

Source:
Why You Should Pay Attention to Bone Health as You Get Older by Emily Wagner

Be Eco: Join the Green and Share the Love! | ecogreenlove
Ko-fi Tip | ecogreenlove


Join the ecogreenlove community


Advertisements

We appreciate your feedback! 💚

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.