The Manufacturing of Bone Diseases: The Story of Osteoporosis and Osteopenia
In Brief
- The Facts:The
Facts:This article was written by Sayer Ji, Founder of Greenmedinfo.com
where this article was originally published. Posted here with
permission.
- Reflect On:Modern day definitions of Osteopenia & Osteoporosis were conceived by the World Health Organization (WHO) in the early 90's and then projected upon millions of women's bodies in order to convince them they had a drug-treatable disease.
Osteopenia (1992)[i] and Osteoporosis (1994)[ii] were
formally identified as skeletal diseases by the World Health
Organization (HTO) as bone mineral densities (BMD) 1 and 2.5 standard
deviations, respectively, below the peak bone mass of an average young
adult Caucasian female, as measured by an x-ray device known as Dual
energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA, or DEXA). This
technical definition, now used widely around the world as the gold
standard, is disturbingly inept, and as we shall see, likely conceals an
agenda that has nothing to do with the promotion of health.
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Deviant Standards: Aging Transformed Into a Disease
A ‘standard deviation’ is simply
a quantity calculated to indicate the extent of deviation for a group as
a whole, i.e. within any natural population there will be folks with
higher and lower biological values, e.g. height, weight, bone mineral
density, cholesterol levels. The choice of an average young adult female
(approximately 30-year old) at peak bone mass in the human lifecycle as
the new standard of normality for all women 30 or older, was,
of course, not only completely arbitrary but also highly illogical.
After all, why should a 80-year old’s bones be defined as “abnormal” if
they are less dense than a 30-year old’s?
Within the WHO’s new BMD definitions the
aging process is redefined as a disease, and these definitions targeted
women, much in the same way that menopause was once redefined as a
“disease” that needed to be treated with synthetic hormone replacement
(HRT) therapies; that is, before the whole house of cards collapsed with
the realization that by “treating” menopause as a disease the medical
establishment was causing far more harm than good, e.g. heart disease,
stroke and cancer.
As if to fill the void left by the HRT
debacle and the disillusionment of millions of women, the WHO’s new
definitions resulted in the diagnosis, and subsequent labeling, of
millions of healthy middle-aged and older women with what they were now
being made to believe was another “health condition,” serious enough to
justify the use of expensive and extremely dangerous bone drugs (and equally dangerous mega-doses of elemental calcium) in the pursuit of increasing bone density by any means necessary.
One thing that cannot be debated, as it
is now a matter of history, is that this sudden transformation of
healthy women, who suffered no symptoms of “low bone mineral density,”
into an at-risk, treatment-appropriate group, served to generate
billions of dollars of revenue for DXA device manufacturers, doctor
visits, and drug prescriptions around the world.
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WHO Are They Kidding?
Osteopenia is, in fact, a medical and
diagnostic non-entity. The term itself describes nothing more than a
statistical deviation from an arbitrarily determined numerical value or
norm. According to the osteoporosis epidemiologist Dr. L. Joseph
Melton at the Mayo Clinic who participated in setting the original WHO
criteria in 1992, “[osteopenia] was just meant to indicate the emergence
of a problem,” and noted that “It didn’t have any particular diagnostic
or therapeutic significance. It was just meant to show a huge group who
looked like they might be at risk.”[iii] Another
expert, Michael McClung, director of the Oregon Osteoporosis Center,
criticized the newly adopted disease category osteopenia by
saying ”We have medicalized a nonproblem.”[iv]
In reality, the WHO definitions violate
both commonsense and fundamental facts of biological science (sadly, an
increasingly prevalent phenomenon within drug company-funded
science). After all, anyone over 30 years of age should have lower bone density than a 30 year old, as this is consistent with the normal and natural healthy aging
process. And yet, according to the WHO definition of osteopenia, the
eons-old programming of our bodies to gradually shed bone density as we
age, is to be considered a faulty design and/or pathology in need of
medical intervention.
How the WHO, or any other organization
which purports to be a science-based “medical authority,” can make an
ostensibly educated public believe that the natural thinning of the
bones is not normal, or more absurdly: a disease, is astounding. In
defense of the public, the cryptic manner in which these definitions and
diagnoses have been cloaked in obscure mathematical and clinical
language makes it rather difficult for the layperson to discern just how
outright insane the logic they are employing really is.
So, let’s look closer at the definitions
now, which are brilliantly elucidated by Washington.edu’s
published online course on Bone Densitometry, which can viewed in its
entirety here.
The Manufacture of a Disease through Categorical Sleight-of-Hand
The image above shows
the natural decrease in hip bone density occurring with age, with
variations in race and gender depicted. Observe that loss of bone
mineral density with age is a normal process.
Next, is the classical bell-shaped
curve, from which T- and Z-scores are based. T-sores are based on the
young adult standard (30-year old) bone density as being normal for everyone,
regardless of age, whereas the much more logical Z-score
compares your bone mineral density to that of your age group, as well as
sex and ethnic background. Now here’s where it gets disturbingly clear
how ridiculous the T-score really system is….
Above is an image showing how within the
population of women used to determine “normal” bone mineral density,
e.g. 30-year olds, 16% of them already “have” osteopenia” according to
the WHO definitions, and 3% already “have” osteoporosis! According
to Washington.edu’s online course “One standard deviation is at the 16th
percentile, so by definition 16% of young women have osteopenia! As
shown below, by the time women reach age 80, very few are considered
normal.”
Above you will see what happens when the
WHO definitions of “normal bone density” are applied to aging
populations. Whereas at age 25, 15% of the population will “have”
osteopenia, by age 50 the number grows to 33%. And by age 65, 60% will
be told they have either osteopenia (40%) or osteoporosis (20%).
On the other hand, if one uses the Z-score, which compares your bones to that of your age group, something remarkable happens: a huge burden of “disease” disappears! In a review on the topic published in 2009 in the Journal of Clinical Densitometry,
30-39% of the subjects who had been diagnosed with osteoporosis with
two different DXA machine models were reclassified as either normal or
“osteopenic” when the Z- score was used instead of the T-score. The
table therefore can be turned on the magician-like sleight-of-hand used
to convert healthy people into diseased ones, as long as an
age-appropriate standard of measurement is applied, which presently it
is not.
Bone Mineral Density is NOT Equivalent to Bone Strength
As you can see there are a number of
insurmountable problems with the WHO’s definitions, but perhaps the most
fatal flaw is the fact that the Dual energy X-ray absorpitometry device
(DXA) is only capable of revealing the mineral density of the bone, and this is not the same thing as bone quality/strength.
While there is a correlation between
bone mineral density and bone quality/strength – that is to say, they
overlap in places — they are not equivalent. In other words, density,
while an excellent indicator of compressive strength (resisting breaking
when being crushed by a static weight), is not an accurate indicator of
tensile strength (resisting breaking when being pulled or stretched).
Indeed, in some cases having higher bone density indicates that the bone is actually weaker.
Glass, for instance, has high density and compressive strength, but it
is extremely brittle and lacks the tensile strength required to
withstand easily shattering in a fall. Wood, on the other hand, which is
closer in nature to human bone than glass or stone is less dense
relative to these materials, but also extremely strong relative to them,
capable of bending and stretching to withstand the very same forces
which the bone is faced with during a fall. Or, take spider web. It is
has infinitely greater strength and virtually no density. Given these
facts, having “high” bone density (and thereby not having osteoporosis)
may actually increase the risk of fracture in a real-life scenario like a
fall.
Essentially, the WHO definitions
distract from key issues surrounding bone quality and real world bone
fracture risks, such as gait and vision disorders.[v] In
other words, if you are able to see and move correctly in our body, you
are less likely to fall, which means you are less prone to fracture.
Keep in mind also that the quality of human bone depends entirely on
dietary and lifestyle patterns and choices, and unlike x-ray-based
measurements, bone quality is not decomposable to strictly numerical
values, e.g. mineral density scores. Vitamin K2 and soy isoflavones,
for instance, significantly reduce bone fracture rates without
increasing bone density. Scoring high on bone density tests may save a
woman from being intimidated into taking dangerous drugs or swallowing
massive doses of elemetal calcium, but it may not translate into
preventing “osteoporosis,” which to the layperson means the risk of
breaking a bone. But high bone mineral density may result in far worse
problems…
High Bone Mineral Density & Breast Cancer
One of the most important facts about
bone mineral density, conspicuously absent from discussion, is that
having higher-than-normal bone density in middle-aged and older women
actually INCREASES their risk of breast cancer by 200-300%,
and this is according to research published in some of the world’s most
well-respected and authoritative journals, e.g. Lancet, JAMA, NCI. (see
citations below).
While it has been known for at least fifteen years that high bone density profoundly increases the risk of breast cancer —
and particularly malignant breast cancer — the issue has been given
little to no attention, likely because it contradicts the propaganda
expounded by mainstream woman’s health advocacy organizations. Breast
cancer awareness programs focus on x-ray based breast screenings as a
form of “early detection,” and the National Osteoporosis Foundation’s
entire platform is based on expounding the belief that increasing bone
mineral density for osteoporosis prevention translates into improved
quality and length of life for women.
The research, however, is not going
away, and eventually these organizations will have to acknowledge it, or
risk losing credibility.
Journal of the American Medical Association (1996): Women
with bone mineral density above the 25th percentile have 2.0 to 2.5
times increased risk of breast cancer compared with women below the 25th
percentile.
Journal of Nutrition Reviews (1997): Postmenopausal
women in the highest quartile for metacarpal bone mass were found to
have an increased risk of developing breast cancer, after adjusting for
age and other variables known to influence breast cancer risk.
American Journal of Epidemiology (1998): Women
with a positive family history of breast cancer and who are in the
highest tertile bone mineral density are at a 3.41-fold increased risk
compared with women in the lowest tertile.
Journal of the National Cancer Institute (2001): Elderly
women with high bone mineral density (BMD) have up to 2.7 times greater
risk of breast cancer, especially advanced cancer, compared with women
with low BMD.
Journal Breast (2001): Women in the lowest quartile of bone mass appear to be protected against breast cancer.
Journal Bone (2003): Higher bone density (upper 33%) is associated with a 2-fold increased risk of breast cancer.
European Journal of Epidemiology (2004): Women
with highest tertile bone mineral density (BMD) measured at the Ward’s
triangle and at the femoral neck are respectively at 2.2-and 3.3-fold
increased risk of breast cancer compared with women at the lowest
tertile of BMD.
View additional citations on the breast cancer-bone density link.
High Bone Density: More Harm Than Good
The present-day fixation within the
global medical community on “osteoporosis prevention” as a top women’s
health concern, is simply not supported by the facts. The #1 cause of
death in women today is heart disease, and the #2 cause of death is
cancer, particularly breast cancer, and not death from complications
associated with a bone fracture or break. In fact, in the grand scheme
of things osteoporosis or low bone mineral density does not even make
the CDC’s top ten list of causes of female mortality. So, why is it
given such a high place within the hierarchy of women’s health concerns?
Is it a business decision or a medical one?
Regardless of the reason or motive, the
obsessive fixation on bone mineral density is severely undermining the
overall health of women. For example, the mega-dose calcium supplements
being taken by millions of women to “increase bone mineral density” are
known to increase the risk of heart attack by between 24-27%, according to two 2011 meta-analyses published in Lancet, and 86% according to a more recent meta-analysis published in the journal Heart.
Given the overwhelming evidence, the 1200+ mgs of elemental calcium the
National Osteoporosis Foundation (NOF) recommends women 50 and older
take to “protect their bones,” may very well be inducing coronary artery
spasms, heart attacks and calcified arterial plaque in millions of
women. Considering that the NOF name calcium supplement manufacturers
Citrical and Oscal as corporate sponsors, it is unlikely their message
will change anytime soon.
Now, when we consider the case of
increased breast cancer risk linked to high bone mineral density, being
diagnosed with osteopenia or osteoporosis would actually indicate a significantly reduced risk of developing the disease. What
is more concerning to women: breaking a bone (from which one can heal),
or developing breast cancer? If it is the latter, a low BMD reading
could be considered cause for celebration and not depression, fear and
the continued ingestion of inappropriate medications or supplements,
which is usually the case following a diagnosis of osteopenia or
osteoporosis.
We hope this article will put to rest
any doubts that the WHO’s fixation on high bone density was designed not
to protect or improve the health of women, but rather to convert the
natural aging process into a blockbuster disease, capable of generating
billions of dollars of revenue.
Learn more on the GreenMedInfo database:
References
(i) WHO Scientific
Group on the Prevention and Management of Osteoporosis (2000 : Geneva,
Switzerland) (2003). “Prevention and management of osteoporosis : report
of a WHO scientific group” (PDF). Retrieved 2007-05-31.
(ii) WHO
(1994). “Assessment of fracture risk and its application to screening
for postmenopausal osteoporosis. Report of a WHO Study Group”. World
Health Organization technical report series 843: 1-129. PMID 7941614.
(iii) Kolata, Gina (September 28, 2003). “Bone Diagnosis Gives New Data But No Answers”. New York Times.
(v )P Dargent-Molina, F Favier,
H Grandjean, C Baudoin, A M Schott, E Hausherr, P J Meunier,
G Bréart Fall-related factors and risk of hip fracture: the EPIDOS
prospective study. Lancet. 1996 Jul 20;348(9021):145-9. PMID: 8684153
Originally published: 2017-11-18
Articule updated: 2019-08-23
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