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The Science of Bone Health - 3 Principles to Develop & Maintain Bone

1/18/2019

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Our bones are remarkable examples of evolution's ingenuity. 

From a functional perspective, bones serve multiple roles - structure, mobility, support, protection as well as serving as a reservoir for essential minerals. 

​These roles became important, when our distant predecessors left the calcium-rich ocean to live in calcium-poor fresh water, and then further evolved to live on land where gravitational forces (without the buoyancy effect of water) put greater stress on the skeleton.
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Our skeletons store two key minerals, calcium and phosphorus, both essential for the healthy functioning of cells and bodily organs, and our bones are called, in times of stress, to maintain blood levels of both. 

A complex system of hormones regulates calcium and phosphorus in our bodies acting on bone, intestine and kidneys to maintain adequate supply for proper cellular function in all cells but particularly in nerves and muscle.

These hormones include:
Calcium Regulating Hormones
  1. Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) - the parathyroid gland monitors calcium levels and releases PTH when levels drop.  PTH increase osteoclast numbers and activity and result in bone resorption - freeing calcium for other purposes.
  2. Vitamin D - acts on the intestines to absorb calcium and on the osteoclasts to resorb bone and maintain blood calcium levels thereby keeping PTH in check.
  3. Calcitonin - released by the thyroid, calcitonin decreases osteoclast activity and decreases resorption of Calcium and phosphate from the kidneys
Sex Hormones
  1. Estrogen -  In both males and females, estrogens play a key role in bone maturation and maintenance of bone density.  The drop in estrogen in menopause leads to dramatic bone loss in women. (more on this to come)
  2. Testosterone -  can influence bone health by binding to androgen receptors directly or to estrogen receptors (ERs) indirectly via aromatization to estrogen
Other Hormones
  1. Thyroid hormone - elevated levels of thyroid hormones lead to bone loss through increase osteoclast activity as well as decreased resorption of Calcium in the kidneys
  2. Cortisol - elevated cortisol likewise increases bone loss through increased osteoclast activity
  3. Growth Hormone & Insulin-Like Growth Factor (IGF-1) - most of the effect of growth hormone is through the GH dependant secretion of IGF-1 from the liver.  IGF-1 acts on osteoblasts to increase bone formation.

Of these, Vitamin D stands out, as we are dependent on our environment, specifically sunlight to synthesize adequate Vitamin D to maintain adequate dietary calcium absorption from our intestines.

The dual roles of bone, to act as structure and at the same time represent a reservoir for calcium and phosphorus, are in direct conflict with each other. 

Bones must be strong and flexible to respond to the weight bearing and mechanical forces of our activities.  When our activities increase in intensity, our bones get stronger in order to sustain the load. 

However if calcium or phosphorus are in short supply, our regulatory hormones will draw them out of bone to serve vital functions in other cells in the body, and in the process potentially weaken bone.

Bone is an incredible material providing both strength and flexibility in order to be resilient to the mechanical forces imposed by daily activities, not to mention sports. To accomplish this bone is a composite material made of minerals bound to protein, predominantly collagen. 

If bone was made only from mineral crystals it would be brittle and fracture easily; if made solely from protein it would be too flexible and would not provide adequate structure and flexibility. 

The mineral components of bone are crystals of calcium and phosphate called hydroxyapatite.  They are bound in a matrix to a triplet of three long, thin, intertwined collagen rods with are strengthened by chemical bonds between proteins. 

Other proteins further strengthen the collagen matrix and regulate mineral binding.  Small changes in shape of the bones, from mechanical forces, act on the cells inside the bone to send signals that allow bone to respond to these loads by remodelling and strengthening.

In this way, our bones are always changing and growing, responding to mechanical loads, resorbing and laying down new bone.

Bone health depends on the balanced effects of two kinds of bone cells:
  • Osteoblasts - the cells that make bone and
  • Osteoclasts - the cells that dissolve and remove old bone
During our childhood, as our bones are growing both cell types are constantly working, osteoclasts reshaping and osteoblasts rebuilding bone with osteoblast activity predominating so that bone length, thickness and overall mass increase as our bodies grow in stature. 

Once growth is finished and we are adults, osteoblasts spend less time creating new bone and more time regulating bone repair - osteoblasts signal osteoclast to hollow out bone in a specific location and then fill in that area with new & healthy bone.

Bone also has another remarkable feature - it is anti-fragile:  if stressed it gets stronger. 
This phenomena, called Wolff's Law was originally recognized in late 19th century, but is probably most dramatically visualized in tennis players who show far greater bone mass in their racket arm as compared to their non-dominant arm.

This remarkable gift, that our bones grow stronger through stress and usage has a dark, flip side:  our bones grow weaker through disuse.

Only in modern times has this become a downside.  For most of human history, our lives were simply too active.  Our predecessors had very strong bones from all the physical work and stress placed on their bones throughout their lives.  From the industrial revolution on onward, labor saving technologies have decreased the degree to which we need to use our bodies to the point that many of us are no longer building enough bone.  This is another example of evolutionary mismatch that I have previously written about.

Compounding this fundamental mismatch, modern diets and lifestyles also lead to deficiencies in dietary calcium, protein and Vitamin D necessary for bone health.

To develop and maintain bone mass three key principles emerge:
  1. Use your bones to increase their strength
    • "use it or lose it" applies to your bones
  2. Supply your body with the key ingredients to develop bone
    • Osteoblasts use calcium to build new bone, calcium comes from the food we eat and requires adequate Vitamin D for absorption. (for more on Vitamin D - see these previous blog posts: Should I Take Vitamin D? How much? and A Better Way to Get Vitamin D in the Winter
    • Bone formation is also dependent on adequate protein intake to build the collagen-hydroxyapatite bone matrix.
    • Finally Vitamin K2 is necessary to for activating proteins released by the osteoblasts that draws calcium into the bone matrix.  (Vitamin K2 is generally produced by bacteria in our GI tract - so another reason to maintain gut health.)
  3. Avoid substances that decrease bone strength:
    • tobacco - smokers lose bone density sooner than non-smokers
    • alcohol - 3 or more drinks per day can increase bone loss
    • colas - the phosphoric acid in colas leaches calcium from bones.  (our partner BodyComp have numerous case studies of young people with decreased bone density due to excessive cola consumption).
    • some medications
      • excess thyroid replacement
      • corticosteroids

Next week, we will look at osteoporosis and what you can do to prevent or reverse it.
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    Author

    Dr. Brendan Byrne

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