Hi Gloria,
As part of deciding whether to stay with Fosamax, you might wish to do some research on curcumin and bone density. If you choose not to go with the doc's script, then substituting your own research may be a sensible alternative. Strontium is the other thing they talk about.
Exercise wise, I guess I should admit to being a retired massage therapist, so I actually have had decent training in this sort of area.
The objective is to 1) lay down bone, or at least limit loss; 2) avoid fractures.
1. Load bearing exercise.
2. Strength.
3. Flexibility.
4. Proprioception (balance).
1. Load Bearing exercise. This encourages the body to lay down new bone in the bones that support your weight, especially the lower body, or at least reduce loss in those areas. Weight bearing exercise is walking, running, tai chi, golf, tennis, skiing, most gym group classes etc. Anything where you are carrying your weight on your feet. Exercises that don't help are where your weight is supported by something else - eg, cycling, swimming, canoeing, rowing. Quantity wise the recommended bare minimum is 30 minutes a day, but ideally aim for an hour a day, most days. Doesn't need to be in one session.
2. Strength. If the muscles that surround your key bones are strong, you are less likely to have a fracture. You are also less likely to fall. Pilates exercises are brilliant for strengthening the core muscles that surround and support your spine and abdominal area. Get a DVD if you can't get to classes. Or just do crunches. A gym weight routine with squats and leg presses is great for lower body strength, if you do it.
The minimum must do exercise is chair squats: - Pretend you are going to sit down. Stand in front of a chair, legs slightly more than hip width apart and slowly lower your body as if to sit down. Just as your buttocks or trousers skim the seat, stop and slowly stand back up. Use your thigh muscles, don't hold the arms of the chair. Aim to do it without bending forward at the waist excessively. This provides a good basic functional squat. Aim to do 15, take a 1 minute break, then another 15. If this is difficult at first, aim for a smaller number such as 5 and gradually increase. If it is too easy, add weights. Do this every second day.
3. Flexibility. This prevents falls because if you stumble your body has a greater range of movement to work with. Do a basic routine that covers front of the thigh (quads), back of the thighs (hamstrings), side to side movement of the spine, forward and backward movements of the spine, and a spinal twist.
Do this at least three times a week, but ideally daily.
4. Proprioception. Many osteoporotic fractures are caused by falls. Avoid falls by having good balance. Proprioception is a fancy term for being able to sense that your balance is going, and recover it - hopefully without even realising it. Practice standing on one leg each day. To start with, just lift one foot and rest it on the other ankle, or on top of the other foot. Hold for a minute if you can. Repeat with other leg. As you progress, bring the foot further up the leg, until you can do the yoga "tree" pose. Try introducing movement - so bring the foot up, and swing it slowly behind you then in front. Try bending at the waist with one leg stuck out behind and arms wide- aeroplane pose. Explore and challenge what your body can do. Yoga DVD's that focus on balance are good for this, as is tai chi. Or just stand on one leg in the supermarket queue!! I stand in tree to mash the potatoes, and have been known to use aeroplane to empty the dishwasher
I used to do this with patients in the clinic, where we can work out what they are willing to do, and plan a routine to suit.
I know it sounds like a lot of work. But as always it's about priority. And doing something beats doing nothing, even if you can't do a full routine.
Let me know if you would like me to hunt down good stretches or expand on any other areas.
Cheers,
Lyn