@thisnthat ,Congrats on your hard work and improved DEXA scores!
My scores are much worse than yours, and the doctor recommended Tymlos. Still haven't bit the bullet yet and taken it, because I have always had such bad reactions to drugs. That being said, I'm willing to try it at a lower dose and titrate upwards.
You mentioned a low intensity vibration plate. Are you using the Marodyne low intensity vibration? I have been considering that myself, but at $3K, I have hesitated because there really isn't any scientific proof it works. None the less, people claim that it does.
Regarding Strontium, I just started that, too. The controversy is regarding the lab made Strontium that was prescribed in Europe, not the citrate form, which is supposedly natural.
Keep up the hard work. Getting fractures is very unpleasant.
Hi, mary1951!
Thank you for the kind words! 😊
Yes, I use the Marodyne LIV platform twice a day, but have also just ordered the wearable Osteoboost vibration belt (should receive it in about a month). An initial albeit small clinical trial indicated it may be quite effective at improving bone density. We shall see! The price, at around $900+ is much more reasonable.
I saw my rheumatologist last week, the same one who had wanted me to go on Reclast (which I refused, having heard about longterm pain as a possible side effect, as well as arrhythmia). He had completely overlooked my latest DEXA & TBS scores, and his own recommendation that I needn’t go on OP drugs after all!
Instead, he asked me how I was going to treat my osteoporosis!!!! Gobsmacked, I replied that I no longer had osteoporosis, and that my latest scan showed my spine as normal! Clearly flustered at this oversight, he looked at my results and asked how did I achieve this big jump in my score. When I started to respond, his eyes glazed over and I knew it was a waste of time. He is totally in the Big Pharma thrall.
That aside, I really do think you can achieve amazing results if you are willing to put in the work. If I had gone on the Reclast, the average improvement in lumbar spine bone density is about 4.1% a year. Using natural means in under a year and a half, I had:
- approximately a 32% improvement in my spine;
- over 6% in the average femoral neck score; and,
- about a 32% improvement in the average total hip scores (calculating SD, or standard deviation).
I am now at the point where my functional gynecologist says it’s okay to cut back on the supplements. Not much on pill taking, so happy about that!