Showing posts with label osteoporosis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label osteoporosis. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2009

It's Official! Cycling Can Harm Your Bones

Cycling might be one of the best ways of improving your cardiovascular health, but a recent study has confirmed that if the only exercise you do is road cycling, you might well be putting yourself at risk of osteoporosis.

Osteoporosis, or porous bone, is a disease characterised by low bone mass and structural deterioration of bone tissue over time, leading to fragility and an increased risk of fractures of the hip, spine and wrist.


Cyclists are also at risk of osteopenia, or sub-normal bone density. A one percent decrease in density increases fracture risk by up to five percent.


The study, which appeared in the journal Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, compared the lower spine bone densities of a group of competitive male cyclists against a control group of moderately active men who did other sports. The cyclists had considerably lower spinal bone densities, despite having a greater calcium intake.


A similar study was published in the journal Metabolism in 2007, which compared road cyclists and runners between the ages of 20 and 59. It found that 63 percent of the cyclists had osteopenia of the spine or hip, compared with 19 percent of the runners.


Apparently, it’s the lack of impact in our sport that can lead to low bone density, especially in the lower back, which remains immobile and shock-free when riding on smooth roads. Ironically, cycling’s lack of impact is precisely what makes the sport so practicable for older riders.

The problem can be exacerbated by riders in hard training too, since they might not be eating enough and are burning up essential bone-building nutrients such as vitamin D and calcium with their hardcore training.

Play rough

It seems that cross-training is the key to a healthy bone mass, with running and ball sports being ideal.


“When it comes to bone health,” says Dr Claire Bowring of the National Osteoporosis Society, “cyclists need to add some weight-bearing exercise to their training.”


As an illustration, Dr Bowring went on to explain the effect of force on bone health in professional tennis players: “Players were found to have more than 25 percent higher bone density in their serving arm,” says Bowring. “But running, dancing or any exercise where you’re supporting the weight of your body helps build strong bones.”


Changes in bone density can develop over decades, but the early 20s for men – when most will consider themselves at the peak of their physical condition – are critical for achieving optimal bone mass.


But if you don’t like running or ball sports and you strictly won’t go dancing, there is another way of building up your bones. The answer lies in a previous study published in a 2002 issue of Bone magazine, which found that mountain bikers had considerably higher bone density than the sample road cyclists. It seems that bumpy trails will give your skeleton all the impact it needs to stimulate bone growth and it will improve your bike handling and recovery rate in leaps and bounds too.

Bone meals

Consume less:

  • Salt

  • Sugar: including refined or processed foods, which increase calcium excretion from the body and stimulate the adrenal glands

  • Red meat: too much protein won’t help build bone density

  • Carbonated soft drinks: phosphoric acid upsets the body’s calcium/phosphorous ratio, which stimulates release of the parathyroid hormone and reduces calcium uptake

  • Alcohol

  • Tobacco

  • Caffeine: it reduces mineral absorption and stimulates adrenal glands

Eat more:

  • Dark green vegetables, berries and cherries, soy foods, sesame seeds, flaxseed, beans and pulses, canned oily fish and nuts – all of which are rich in nutrients that will support healthy bone growth.

  • For those particularly at risk or already suffering, nutritional supplements are a good idea and there are plenty of combined bone health formulas available. But make sure they contain a full spectrum of the following nutrients: calcium, magnesium, zinc, boron, silicon, vitamin D, vitamin K, B6, folic acid, B12 and vitamin C.

  • Phyto-oestrogen supplements can also be beneficial, including soy isoflavones, as well as the herbal medicines black cohosh and dong quai.
Source: Bike Radar

Friday, December 29, 2006

Are cyclists at risk for osteoporosis?

Cycling is a great cardiovascular exercise that can spare joints from stress, but it still puts riders at risk for osteoporosis, says Mountain Bike columnist Selene Yeager, so she recommends adding cross training and calcium supplements to exercise regimens.
  • If the only time you move your body is when it's clipped into a pair of SPDs, you could be raising your risk for this bone-thinning disease.
  • Cycling is a non-weight-bearing activity, which means your bones don't have to support your own (or any outside) weight to do it.
  • That's good news for your joints, because they're spared the stress, but it can be bad news for your bones because they need stress to build.
  • Without it, the body keeps taking the calcium it needs from your skeleton without putting any fresh bone back, and you lose bone density.
  • The best thing for your bones--and the rest of your body--is to throw in some cross-training.
  • Weight training is particularly good for building bones.
  • Doing a full-body strength-training routine three days a week strengthens your skeleton as well as your muscles.
  • Adding running into your routine a couple times a week (or more in the off season) can strengthen bones as well.
  • As for calcium supplements: They're great added protection.
  • The National Osteoporosis Foundation recommends getting 1,000-1,300 milligrams of calcium a day.
  • That's about three glasses of calcium-fortified milk a day.
  • If you don't eat much dairy, definitely supplement.
  • KEEP YOUR SKELETON STRONG DON'T SMOKE: Human chimneys lose bone twice as quickly as nonsmokers.
  • DITCH THE COLA: Carbonated drinks, especially colas, are high in phosphorous, which blocks calcium absorptions.
  • Plus they're a big zero in the nutritional category.
  • MODERATE BOOZE: Too much alcohol inhibits calcium absorption and bone formation.
  • Stick to no more than a drink or two a day.
Source: MountainBike/ photo courtesy of A2Z of Health, Beauty and Fitness

Established in December 2006