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Build Your Bones, Girlfriend!. Facts About Our Bones. Bones are living tissue, they provide structural support, and protect vital organs Bones are made up of: Calcium Phosphorous Protein Magnesium Vitamins and other minerals in smaller amounts. Facts About Our Bones.
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Facts About Our Bones • Bones are living tissue, they provide structural support, and protect vital organs • Bones are made up of: • Calcium • Phosphorous • Protein • Magnesium • Vitamins and other minerals in smaller amounts
Facts About Our Bones • The average adult skeleton contains over TWO POUNDS of calcium more for taller people • We need calcium to develop teeth and bones, and also to regulate heart and muscle, and clot blood
Facts About Our Bones • When we are young we store and build bone effectively. • Most bone – 85 to 90 percent – is made before age 20. • As we get older – age 35 to 45 – bones begin to break down faster than they are formed.
So What does mg. stand for ? Milligram = One thousandth of a gram Ounce = 28 grams
Are We Measuring Up? • Who’s getting adequate calcium • 13.5% of girls ages 12-19 • 36.3% of boys ages 12-19 • About 50% of adult women
Life Cycle of Bones Woman Aentered adulthood with enough calcium in her bones to last a lifetime. Bone mass Woman B had less bone mass starting out and so suffered ill effects from bone loss later on. Danger zone Osteoporosis Age 20 Age 40 Age 60
Building Bones • Ages 9 to 18 years are a key period in life for growth • In these years, you’ll grow faster than any other time other than infancy. • Ages 12 to 18 • About 85% of our adult bone mass is made • Up to 80%of our adult weight is achieved • What if the materials needed for this growth are not available, what happens…an opportunity lost??
Osteopenia & Osteoporosis • Osteopenia:“Ricketts” bones bend due to weakness • Common in the early 1900s poor nutrition
Osteopenia & Osteoporosis • Osteoporosis:“Little Old Lady Disease” bones break due to weakness • Common NOW
Osteopenia & Osteoporosis • One in 2 women and one in 8 men over age 50 will have an osteoporosis-related fracture • The estimated cost is $38 million a day
I’m Just A Teenager –Why Should I Care Now ? • During the teen years, most of the adult skeleton is formed • Fewer than 15 percent of teenage girls get enough calcium! • If you build your bones when you're in your teens, you will be less likely to fracture your bones when you're older. • AND…very thin girls, especially girls on diets, can get a type of osteoporosis while they are still YOUNG
I’m Just A Teenager –Why Should I Care Now ? • Certain people are more likely to develop osteoporosis • Don’t exercise • Thin and/or small frame • Caucasian • Asian • Family history – your grandma, aunt, grandfather? • Women are 4 times more likely to develop osteoporosis than men • What puts you at risk NOW? • Being underweight • Not getting enough calciumor exercise
Calcium In Your Diet • Three of the following foods provide about 300 mg calcium • ½ cup cottage cheese • ½ cup cream soup • ½ cup ice milk, frozen yogurt, or ice cream • 2 oz. (1/2 can) canned fish with bones (salmon, mackerel) • ¼ cup almonds • ½ cup bokchoy, collard greens, or turnip greens • 1 cup broccoli, kale, or mustard greens • 5 figs • 2 Tbsp. cream cheese How many servings of these foods do you eat per day?
Calcium In Your Diet • Just one of the following foods provides about 300mg calcium • 8 oz. glass of milk, or calcium fortified soy milk • 8 oz. glass of calcium fortified orange juice • 6-8 oz. carton of yogurt • 1 ½ oz. of cheese • 1 cup pudding, custard, or flan • 1 Power Bar (or other sports bar) • 1 cup Totalcereal (or other breakfast cereal) How many servings of these foods do you eat per day?
Calcium That Is Non-Dairy CALCIUM CONTENT 100 mg 345 mg 135 mg 70 mg 80 mg 350 mg 135 mg 80 mg 45 mg 105 mg 180 mg 80 mg FOOD 1 English muffin 1 cup Total cereal 5 dried figs 1/2 cup orange slices 1 oz almonds 1 cup fortified soy milk 1 cup navy beans 1/2 cup bok choy 1/2 cup broccoli ½ cup mustard greens 3 oz canned salmon, bones 1 ½ oz milk chocolate
What About Calcium Pills? • Calcium supplements are great if dairy products don’t work for you, or • If you don’t eat a lot of other calcium-containing foods • Supplements come in a variety of types and flavors, including chocolate. • They can be pills, fizzies, chewies, or shakes
What About Calcium Pills? • One supplement can give up to 500 mg of calcium • Supplements may be the answer if you are: • Allergic to milk • Lactose intolerant • A picky eater • On a calorie restricted diet
Difference Between Milk Allergy and Lactose Intolerance? • Milk Allergy: • Mostly smaller children • Cannot eat the PROTEIN in milk products • Cannot have ANY milk products because the immune system rejects them • Lactose Intolerance: • Cannot digest the SUGAR in milk products (lactose) • Usually OK to have some dairy products, especially cultured products like yogurt
About Calcium Supplements • Two main forms • Calcium carbonate Good • Calcium citrate BestCan be taken on an empty stomach and is more easily absorbed • Calcium gluconate Not Good Poorly absorbed • Read product labels carefully, and remember that all supplements are not the same
About Calcium Supplements • Avoid taking more than 500 mg of calcium at one time • Avoid taking calcium at the same time as multivitamin-mineral interferes with iron use • Avoid supplements with bone meal, oyster shell or dolomite. Theymay contain lead, mercury or other toxic metals.
Calcium and Body Weight • Calcium has NO CALORIES • Calcium does not cause weight gain • Consuming 1,000 mg of calcium may actually aid in maintaining or losing weight
Calcium Goes with Vitamin D • Vitamin D allows your body to absorb calcium • Where do we get Vitamin D? • The Sun • Egg yolks, saltwater fish, and liver • Fortified dairy products • Supplements • Need 400 International Units (IU) a day
Calcium Goes with Vitamin D • UV rays from the sun reach the skin and vitamin D is made in the skin then sent to the blood circulation • In Florida, 15-to-20 minutes of sun on the arms and face each day should do it • Sunscreens above SPF8 will block vitamin D formation on the skin • But don’t ignore sunscreens. Why?
Exercise is Also Important for Building Bones • It’s not just calcium • It’s not just vitamin D • Bones also need weight and movement exercise • Physical activity increases bone mass by an average 3%
Exercise is Also Important for Building Bones • Both weight bearing and resistance exercise are important • Resistance training strengthens existing bones you’ve already made • Weight bearing exercise is best to stimulate NEW bone production Walking Basketball/Volleyball Running Gymnastics Tennis Cheerleading What else?
What Else is Important for Bones ? • You should not use tobacco to keep your bones healthy • Smoking interferes with the body’s use of calcium • You should limit caffeine-containing foods and beverages, such as colas and coffee • Drink three cups of coffee or two cans of soda, per day at most • Caffeine causes the body to leech out calcium
Summing It Up • Building strong bones before age 18 is the best defense for bones…for a lifetime • Choose: • A balanced diet rich in calcium and Vitamin D • A healthy lifestyle with no tobacco • Engage in weight-bearing exercise
Build Your Bones,Girlfriend! You’ll never regret it! THANKS!