Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jul 14
Experts Urge 1,000-1,200 mg Calcium for Osteopenia as Bone Loss Can Start Before 65
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jul 14

Experts Urge 1,000-1,200 mg Calcium for Osteopenia as Bone Loss Can Start Before 65

1 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · Jul 14

Summary

  • 52-year-old Melissa Graybill paid out of pocket for a DEXA scan and learned she had osteopenia in her left hip and spine, despite being below the usual U.S. screening age of 65.
  • Experts say bone thinning often begins earlier in women because menopause-related estrogen loss accelerates breakdown, and untreated osteopenia can progress to osteoporosis and fracture.
  • Weight-bearing exercise, jumping and strength training for the core, back and legs are the main non-drug steps; Templeton advises avoiding waist-bending trunk moves because spinal fractures are common.
  • Diet changes are also central: experts recommend 1,000 to 1,200 milligrams of calcium daily from food, about 1,000 IU of vitamin D, and protein intake as high as 0.8 grams per pound of body weight.
  • The stakes rise sharply with age—about 1 in 3 people over 50 who break a hip die within a year—prompting experts to also push smoking cessation and, for some menopausal women, hormone therapy.

Insights

Are official screening guidelines leaving millions of women vulnerable to a preventable bone-thinning disease?
Can a daily vibration belt and AI truly reverse the silent epidemic of bone loss?
A bone scan costs hundreds, but a fracture costs more. Is this out-of-pocket test worth the price?