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Your Bone Health |
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Don't Forget This Often Neglected First Step |
You won't build bone unless you first make certain this is
solidly in place...
No doubt you're well aware of how important it is to protect your bone health, especially as you age. And you're
probably motivated to do it, too. Seeing those old people stooped over, unable to hold themselves upright, faces
contorted with the effort, are difficult to forget.
You likely also know the important role that calcium plays. After all, bones are made from that important mineral
(among others.)
You might even be taking a calcium supplement, perhaps it was even recommended to you by a health professional. You
might even have added some vitamin D as well.
But is that sufficient to protect you? Are calcium and vitamin D adequate to keep your bones healthy?
In a word, no. What's often missing is a crucial step that happens in bone formation before the step in which bones
are mineralized with calcium. And just because it's one you rarely hear about, doesn't mean it's not important. In
fact it's so important, that if you miss it, you will never have healthy bones, no matter how much calcium and
vitamin D you pour into your body.
To understand why, it's important to know how bones are formed. In short, before the bones can use calcium to
become hardened and strong, they have to have a connective tissue matrix. Then, once the connective tissue matrix
is made, vitamin K attaches itself to the cross links in the connective tissue net, and only then does the calcium
become attached.
Without that connective tissue matrix, the mineralization process has no where to attach itself to. In fact, the
relative strength of the connective tissue matrix is why two people can have the same bone mineral density, but one
suffers fractures and the other does not.
In short, connective tissue is the mother of bones.
How can you support the formation of healthy connective tissue so it can form the strands and weave itself together
so that bone minerals can deposit themselves?
Building a strong connective tissue matrix is supported through making certain it has the components necessary to
assemble itself into the strands that later will hold bone deposits. Those strands are made up of the following
components:
1. Protein.
2. Silicon
3. Manganese
4. Vitamin C
5. Vitamin E, and
6. Vitamin A.
Happily, a diet composed of whole organic foods with at least 30% of them raw, will supply these nutrients, so that
supplementation is not routinely required.
But there's one more key ingredient to building healthy connective tissue, which is that the body needs to be
'instructed' to do it. Such commands are driven by hormones. Again, you might think you're 'covered' in that
department if you are taking progesterone and estrogen, or if you know your blood test levels for those two
hormones came back normal. Again, this is incorrect.
The 'orders' to build connective tissue are given by the hormone testosterone. Yes, testosterone in both men and
women is the hormone that drives production of connective tissue.
Keep the six nutrients listed above coming in to your body in adequate amounts, and keep your testosterone levels
normalized, and you will have the key ingredients necessary to build the connective tissue matrix that must be in
place before you can harden bones with deposits of calcium, magnesium, phosphorus.
***************************
If you'd like a free questionnaire so you can assess your own bone health, go here: PerfectBones.com
http://www.betterhealthbytes.com
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Pamela Levin is an R.N. and a Teaching and Supervising Transactional Analyst with 500+ post-graduate hours in
clinical nutrition, herbology and applied kinesiology. In private practice 43 years, she is an award-winning author
and nutritional journalist writing about constructive steps people can take to create better health.
Pamela Levin, R.N., T.S.T.A.
April 21, 2014
For lots of tips to support your better health and greater well-being of body, mind, spirit, emotions and
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Source: http://www.betterhealthbytes.com
Tags: osteoperosis how to increase bone density increase bone density bone building can bone loss be reversed increasing bone density osteopenia osteoporosis
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