Alendronate & leg pains

Posted by laurensb @laurensb, Oct 31 6:43am

Anyone experiencing leg cramps and aches with Alendronate? On and off I've been on alendronate for years and don't remember getting leg pains before.

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@osteoresearch

I take 144mg of magnesium threonate at night. My friend also swears by tonic water with quinine for leg cramps. Hydration is 1st step! Make sure you get enough water. When I’m dehydrated I get cramps.

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Thanks for the info! I do stay hydrated. Since I ditched coffee I'm drinking a lot more water and herbal tea. And recently I read that there may be a connection between caffeine and muscle cramps, so I'm wondering if stopping the coffee may be having an affect on frequency of leg cramps, as I haven't had any in a while. I'll ask about magnesium threonate at my next doctor visit.

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I was only on alendronate for six months and started getting leg cramps even though I take liquid magnesium. The cramps progressed to irregular heartbeat which became quite bad. After my doctor had me take an echocardiogram and carotid ultrasound and both were normal, we brainstormed any changes in my life and the only thing was the alendronate. I stopped it and after a couple of weeks my symptoms went away. The doctor explained that alendronate causes more calcium release which then causes a magnesium depletion to counter the imbalance. This caused an electrolyte imbalance which leads to irregular heartbeat. Of course this doesn’t happen to everyone only those sensitive to the imbalance. So yes take enough magnesium to try to get rid of your symptoms. I couldn’t get enough magnesium intake to correct the imbalance so had to quit taking alendronate. Now I’m trying estrogen and weight training as my spine is fine and I just reached osteoporosis in one femur neck. Hoping it’s enough.

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@humphreysbr

I was only on alendronate for six months and started getting leg cramps even though I take liquid magnesium. The cramps progressed to irregular heartbeat which became quite bad. After my doctor had me take an echocardiogram and carotid ultrasound and both were normal, we brainstormed any changes in my life and the only thing was the alendronate. I stopped it and after a couple of weeks my symptoms went away. The doctor explained that alendronate causes more calcium release which then causes a magnesium depletion to counter the imbalance. This caused an electrolyte imbalance which leads to irregular heartbeat. Of course this doesn’t happen to everyone only those sensitive to the imbalance. So yes take enough magnesium to try to get rid of your symptoms. I couldn’t get enough magnesium intake to correct the imbalance so had to quit taking alendronate. Now I’m trying estrogen and weight training as my spine is fine and I just reached osteoporosis in one femur neck. Hoping it’s enough.

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Thank you so much for this helpful comment. I'm 56 years, went on oral Alendronate from Jan 2021- Jan 2023 for osteoporosis after cancer. Went off because of dry/red, irritated eyes.

The benefits: After cancer estrogen removal made the bones detoriate so fast that the small tarsus bones in my foot started to crumble. I could barely walk. After two months on Alendronate I did a 20 km hike again. It took my arthritis pain and even planar faciit pain away. After two years I had great hip density but one of the joints in my back was still weak, and one had become positive (which is a common result, I have been told).

Negative: I followed the prescription and took the medication standing up. But during medication I needed to go off some weeks once in a while because of stomach sickness. To tolerate the medicine I was almost just eating fruit and vegetables in the end, only chicken, eggs and milk products from animals were tolerable. Other meat and fish was not, as well as sweets and chocolate beside some freshly baked cakes.

Problems with eyes are described in literature, f.ex. "Ocular Side Effects of Bisphosphonates: A Review of Literature", DOI: 10.1089/jop.2022.0094.

The paper states that "It should be noted that the portion that binds bone may remain in the body for up to 10 years after administration". I seem to be stuck with the side effects:
- Nausea, a feeling that there is a pressure in my body which causes reflux typically after 3am at night. This causes severe sleeping problems.
- Irregular, "intense" heartbeats
- Leg cramps and tingling, twitching of legs typically in the evening or at night.

I take small amounts of magnesium (20-30 mg) and something else I get from a multivitamine tablet (manganese?), beside D vitamine and calsium. When I hear my heart starts to pound too loud, I stop for a few days. Also, when my feces pass easily, I know it is time to stop as magnesium controls the release. But I didn't know I could also slightly increase calsium.

I think the bisphosphonates is gradually leaving my body as the symptoms becomes weaker every year and also now my eyes improves. For my eyes, I have done IPL treatment in an effort to keep the meibomian glands open. I hope it will pay off.

What I found helpful was training, especially exercises involving many muscles such as barbell squats and also to train knee joints and feet. Foremost it improves sleep with less disturbance at night. When a GP heard that, he suggested me to try collagen, glucosamine, MSN and chondroitin usually used for leg stiffness and joint comfort. One night I couldn't sleep because of reflux pressure, I tried and soon after I slept well. It seems to reduce the side effects faster than without, especially improving sleep. Now I am wondering if someone else has tried this?

It is possible to check the efficiency of bisphosphonates (and other osteoporosis medication) by a simple blood test. In my case the PINP (Procollagen I) was too high measured shortly after seponation. My physician suspected that the bisphosphonates had not been efficient. Can PINP and similar be of help to single out patients likely to get side effects? Now I too am on estrogen and I measured the efficiency again three months after starting. It has been efficient, but by far not as good as Alendronate.

Finally, I spoke to another patient who had used Alendronate for 5 years without side effects. For me it is a great medicine. I would definitively have done this over again if I could, but I would have been more sensitive to the side effects and stopped earlier.

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@laurensb

I've been on for about 6 years starting 2009 but with a number of drug holidays. I also was on Evenity which improved my scores. I am trying to see if the aches are from the drug or from exercising! Certainly they aren't debilitative and it only happens at night.

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Did u have side effects from taking Evenity

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No. Just had some soreness at the injection sites. Good luck

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@sandra55

Thank you so much for this helpful comment. I'm 56 years, went on oral Alendronate from Jan 2021- Jan 2023 for osteoporosis after cancer. Went off because of dry/red, irritated eyes.

The benefits: After cancer estrogen removal made the bones detoriate so fast that the small tarsus bones in my foot started to crumble. I could barely walk. After two months on Alendronate I did a 20 km hike again. It took my arthritis pain and even planar faciit pain away. After two years I had great hip density but one of the joints in my back was still weak, and one had become positive (which is a common result, I have been told).

Negative: I followed the prescription and took the medication standing up. But during medication I needed to go off some weeks once in a while because of stomach sickness. To tolerate the medicine I was almost just eating fruit and vegetables in the end, only chicken, eggs and milk products from animals were tolerable. Other meat and fish was not, as well as sweets and chocolate beside some freshly baked cakes.

Problems with eyes are described in literature, f.ex. "Ocular Side Effects of Bisphosphonates: A Review of Literature", DOI: 10.1089/jop.2022.0094.

The paper states that "It should be noted that the portion that binds bone may remain in the body for up to 10 years after administration". I seem to be stuck with the side effects:
- Nausea, a feeling that there is a pressure in my body which causes reflux typically after 3am at night. This causes severe sleeping problems.
- Irregular, "intense" heartbeats
- Leg cramps and tingling, twitching of legs typically in the evening or at night.

I take small amounts of magnesium (20-30 mg) and something else I get from a multivitamine tablet (manganese?), beside D vitamine and calsium. When I hear my heart starts to pound too loud, I stop for a few days. Also, when my feces pass easily, I know it is time to stop as magnesium controls the release. But I didn't know I could also slightly increase calsium.

I think the bisphosphonates is gradually leaving my body as the symptoms becomes weaker every year and also now my eyes improves. For my eyes, I have done IPL treatment in an effort to keep the meibomian glands open. I hope it will pay off.

What I found helpful was training, especially exercises involving many muscles such as barbell squats and also to train knee joints and feet. Foremost it improves sleep with less disturbance at night. When a GP heard that, he suggested me to try collagen, glucosamine, MSN and chondroitin usually used for leg stiffness and joint comfort. One night I couldn't sleep because of reflux pressure, I tried and soon after I slept well. It seems to reduce the side effects faster than without, especially improving sleep. Now I am wondering if someone else has tried this?

It is possible to check the efficiency of bisphosphonates (and other osteoporosis medication) by a simple blood test. In my case the PINP (Procollagen I) was too high measured shortly after seponation. My physician suspected that the bisphosphonates had not been efficient. Can PINP and similar be of help to single out patients likely to get side effects? Now I too am on estrogen and I measured the efficiency again three months after starting. It has been efficient, but by far not as good as Alendronate.

Finally, I spoke to another patient who had used Alendronate for 5 years without side effects. For me it is a great medicine. I would definitively have done this over again if I could, but I would have been more sensitive to the side effects and stopped earlier.

Jump to this post

Have you tried an elevated pillow to help prevent or relieve the reflux? If not and you'd like to try one, I can recommend one that helps me.

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I have been on the medicine called Alendronate and I have been experiencing rash and itches skins, leg cramps on and off, have any of you had the same experiences. one doctor suggested I change the medicine but another "no need". ?? any ideas

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