Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

osteoporosis

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Hi,

 

My vegetarian sister and health conscious brother (in their 50's) were both

recently diagnosed with osteoporosis. They are both physically active (tennis,

yoga, biking, etc) and thought they were perfectly healthy. However, they both

recently broke a bone (bike crash and tennis fall). The bone doctor did a test

and found the osteo problem. He prescribed something that gave them acid reflux

so severe that they stopped the treatment. They wonder if there is an

acupuncture or herbal protocol that might address their problem.

I realize that diagnosis is important but I am in China and can't see them. If

any suggestions or success stories I will send them to a practitioner. My

brother lives in Vallejo, CA and sister is in Sebastopol, CA so would also

appreciate recommendations for practitioners near them.

Thanks.

 

David Klatt

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They must not lie down after taking meds for osteoporosis to avoid reflux. Prio

breakfast, sit upright for at least 30 minutes. Not to forget to drink plenty of

water with medication. Be careful with certain spinal movements!

 

Best wishes,

Alan

 

On Feb 12, 2010, at 9:17 PM, " where is the love? " <daodeyao wrote:

 

Hi,

 

My vegetarian sister and health conscious brother (in their 50's) were both

recently diagnosed with osteoporosis. They are both physically active (tennis,

yoga, biking, etc) and thought they were perfectly healthy. However, they both

recently broke a bone (bike crash and tennis fall). The bone doctor did a test

and found the osteo problem. He prescribed something that gave them acid reflux

so severe that they stopped the treatment. They wonder if there is an

acupuncture or herbal protocol that might address their problem.

I realize that diagnosis is important but I am in China and can't see them. If

any suggestions or success stories I will send them to a practitioner. My

brother lives in Vallejo, CA and sister is in Sebastopol, CA so would also

appreciate recommendations for practitioners near them.

Thanks.

 

David Klatt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Recently there was a report that said that trampoline was better for

osteoporosis than weight training as they usually prescribe. I remember the Qi

Gong exercise for Kidney which was to raise the heels and come down on them in a

rapid matter. Gently clicking the teeth on doing so was also part of the

exercise. I'm sure it has a name but I have forgotten it. Interesting how

western science catches up.

The love is everywhere,

Doug

 

 

 

, " where is the love? " <daodeyao

wrote:

>

> Hi,

>

> My vegetarian sister and health conscious brother (in their 50's) were both

recently diagnosed with osteoporosis. They are both physically active (tennis,

yoga, biking, etc) and thought they were perfectly healthy. However, they both

recently broke a bone (bike crash and tennis fall). The bone doctor did a test

and found the osteo problem. He prescribed something that gave them acid reflux

so severe that they stopped the treatment. They wonder if there is an

acupuncture or herbal protocol that might address their problem.

> I realize that diagnosis is important but I am in China and can't see them. If

any suggestions or success stories I will send them to a practitioner. My

brother lives in Vallejo, CA and sister is in Sebastopol, CA so would also

appreciate recommendations for practitioners near them.

> Thanks.

>

> David Klatt

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi David--

The best thing for osteoporosis is to combat it with food once the fracture has

been taken care of with an M.D.

Bone and marrow soup: long term-cure: beef bone, pig, goat, lamb, chicken, duck,

squirrel (and if you can find a dragon, that too :-)  (Not altogether though,

one day beef bone soup, another day pig bone soup, and so on)

put it in a slow cooker overnight, cover with water, add curcumin a

tablespoonful, salt to taste, Da Zao if available, or just prunes like a

handful, or both; oregano a tablespoonful, celery 3 - 4 stalks, garlic, and

whatever dark green hard leafy veggie. Cook overnight and eat it for breakfast

everyday (if there's lots of soup, just heat it up in the am and Bon appetite.

Also pig's feet soup with the same ingredients above except the sweets (Da Zao

and/or prunes) or

Beef tendon soup same ingredients as above (except the sweets)

Pig's feet and beef tendon available at Viernamese stores.

Also: lose the sugar completely. absolutely no refined sugars, none, zero, zip,

nada. No milk (people think milk and calcium...not so) no cheese...particularly

no cheese, maybe farmer's cheese if at all, you know...the loose, soft farmers

cheese, that's it.

 

Internal formula:

Bu shen Zhuang Jin Tang: Tonify KD and Strengthen the Tendons

1. Blood movers:  Mo Yao 9  and Xue jie 9  (not too much right now)

2. Build bones:  zi ran tong  12, jie gu mu (if don’t have this, can

use tou gou cao12, gu sui bu  10, xu duan  15)

3. Tonify KD for helping bones:  bu gu zhi 15, sang ji sheng  10

4. Guiding herbs: sang zhi and jiang huang  10each

DO NOT DO strenuous aerobic exercises (think turtle) no tennis, no mountain

biking, though biking normally is O.K., walking (not running) is O.K.  Keep in

mind these people suffer from severe KD deficiency and depletion and they need

to nourish/build Yin (think turtle, little movement, long life)

Use supplements Spirulina and Chlorella to soften the tendons. Do yoga and

stretches, do Qigong and TaiChi. Best if all aerobic activity is suspended. 

There will be weight gain, but at the moment the restoration of the frame is

paramount, for w/o it there will be no siblings to speak of.

 

Your vegetarian sister I don't know how to help, though she could use the

spirulina and chlorella available at GNC or whole food stores.

 

Kind regards,

Gloria

 

 

 

 

 

________________________________

where is the love? <daodeyao

 

Fri, February 12, 2010 9:17:39 PM

osteoporosis

 

 

Hi,

 

My vegetarian sister and health conscious brother (in their 50's) were both

recently diagnosed with osteoporosis. They are both physically active (tennis,

yoga, biking, etc) and thought they were perfectly healthy. However, they both

recently broke a bone (bike crash and tennis fall). The bone doctor did a test

and found the osteo problem. He prescribed something that gave them acid reflux

so severe that they stopped the treatment. They wonder if there is an

acupuncture or herbal protocol that might address their problem.

I realize that diagnosis is important but I am in China and can't see them. If

any suggestions or success stories I will send them to a practitioner. My

brother lives in Vallejo, CA and sister is in Sebastopol, CA so would also

appreciate recommendations for practitioners near them.

Thanks.

 

David Klatt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They may need to be check with Vitamin D level, beside Chinese herbs. Other

options include IV treatment to bypass GI track.

 

Ta-Ya Lee, MSN, CRNP, MAc, LAc, MBA, MPH

Johns Hopkins Community Physicians

Wyman Park Internal Medicine

Tel 410-338-3421 Fax 410-338-3413

 

Canton Crossing Integrative Medicine

Tel 410-522-9940 Fax 410-522-9954

 

WARNING: E-mail sent over the Internet is not secure. Information sent by

e-mail may not remain confidential.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I recall listening to a seminar with Andrew Gaeddert of Health Concerns talking

about treating osteoporosis with herbs and supplements. It might be useful

contacting him.

 

Also a question for everyone:

Years ago I read a study that compared the rates of osteoporosis with the

amounts of dairy consumed by nations as a whole. They found that the nations

who consumed the most dairy products also had the highest levels of

osteoporosis.

Does anybody know who did that study and where to find the abstract?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here is the article may answer some of your questions.

 

http://www.epocrates.com/dacc/1001/VitDdefBMJ1001.pdf

 

An important reminder I thought on presentation:

 

“Pain and proximal muscle weakness dominate the clinical picture of vitamin D

deficiency in adults. Rib, hip, pelvis, thigh, and foot pain are typical. More

diffuse muscular aches and muscle weakness, including in the limbs and back, are

also common and may be labelled as “fibromyalgia” or as a somatisation of

depression.26 Low bone density on dual energy x ray absorptiometry scanning, or

osteopenia on plain radiography, may also reflect osteomalacia, and these

findings warrant assessment of vitamin D status.”

 

Ta-Ya Lee, MSN, CRNP, MAc, LAc, MBA, MPH

Johns Hopkins Community Physicians

Wyman Park Internal Medicine

Tel 410-338-3421 Fax 410-338-3413

 

Canton Crossing Integrative Medicine

Tel 410-522-9940 Fax 410-522-9954

 

WARNING: E-mail sent over the Internet is not secure. Information sent by

e-mail may not remain confidential.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I use the supplement " Osteobalance " from Pure Encapsulations. It appears to work

well (difficult to assess in long term issues), and is very well tolerated.

All good things, Tymothy

 

 

 

, " where is the love? " <daodeyao

wrote:

>

> Hi,

>

> My vegetarian sister and health conscious brother (in their 50's) were both

recently diagnosed with osteoporosis. They are both physically active (tennis,

yoga, biking, etc) and thought they were perfectly healthy. However, they both

recently broke a bone (bike crash and tennis fall). The bone doctor did a test

and found the osteo problem. He prescribed something that gave them acid reflux

so severe that they stopped the treatment. They wonder if there is an

acupuncture or herbal protocol that might address their problem.

> I realize that diagnosis is important but I am in China and can't see them. If

any suggestions or success stories I will send them to a practitioner. My

brother lives in Vallejo, CA and sister is in Sebastopol, CA so would also

appreciate recommendations for practitioners near them.

> Thanks.

>

> David Klatt

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...