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Bone Health After Menopause: The Decade That Decides

By the Cyclora editorial team

Bone is the menopause story nobody feels happening. There’s no flash, no sweat, no 3am summons — just a quiet actuarial shift that announces itself, if ignored, as a fractured wrist on an icy morning fifteen years later. The stakes are real: about 1 in 2 women over 50 will break a bone because of osteoporosis (Bone Health & Osteoporosis Foundation). The good news buried in that sentence: fifteen years is a lot of time to act, and the actions work.

What estrogen was doing for your skeleton

Bone constantly remodels — old bone out, new bone in — and estrogen kept that ledger balanced by restraining the demolition crew. When estrogen falls, demolition outpaces construction, and the loss concentrates in the years right around the final period: up to around 10% of bone density can go in the first five or so years before the rate levels off.

This is why timing matters more here than for almost any other menopause topic. The transition decade is when the trajectory gets set — and why early menopause and surgical menopause raise the stakes further: more years without estrogen’s protection.

Who should ask about a scan, and when

A DEXA scan — quick, painless, low-dose — measures where you stand. Standard advice: all women by 65, earlier with risk factors:

  • Menopause before 45, or surgical menopause
  • A fracture from a minor fall at any adult age
  • Long-term steroid medication
  • Low body weight, smoking, or regularly heavy alcohol
  • A parent who broke a hip
  • Conditions affecting absorption — celiac disease, for instance

If any apply, put the question on the list for your next appointment. “Do I need a bone density scan?” is a five-second question with a decades-long payoff.

What actually builds bone

Load it. Bone responds to mechanical demand — it’s use-it-or- lose-it tissue. Strength training twice a week plus weight-bearing movement (brisk walking, dancing, stairs, jogging if your joints agree) is the core prescription. Swimming and cycling, excellent elsewhere, don’t count here — bone only hears impact and load.

Feed it. Calcium daily (~1,000–1,200mg, food first) and vitamin D so the calcium actually absorbs. Protein matters too — bone is a third protein by weight.

Stop actively withdrawing. Smoking and heavy alcohol both accelerate loss; the alcohol guide covers the midlife math.

Know the treatment options exist. For women at higher risk, hormone therapy prevents the accelerated loss (The Menopause Society), and dedicated bone medications exist for established osteoporosis (NHS). Neither is a DIY decision — both belong in the scan conversation.

And balance work — tai chi, yoga, single-leg practice — protects bones by the other route: the best fracture is the fall that never happened.

When to see a doctor

Sooner rather than at 65 if you have any risk factor above, and promptly if you’ve had a fracture from a fall that shouldn’t have broken anything, noticeable height loss (more than a couple of centimeters), or new persistent mid-back pain — compressed vertebrae can be silent-ish. Osteoporosis found early is very treatable; found late, it’s a broken hip. The scan is the difference, and asking for it is the whole move.

Common questions

How much bone do you lose after menopause?

Bone loss accelerates sharply in the years around the final period — women can lose up to 10% of bone density in the first five years or so, before the rate settles. It's the fastest-losing window of adult life, which is why this decade matters most.

When should I get a bone density scan?

Standard guidance says by 65 for all women, and earlier with risk factors: early or surgical menopause, a fracture from a minor fall, long-term steroid use, low body weight, smoking, heavy alcohol use, or a parent who broke a hip. Ask at your next appointment — it's a quick, painless scan.

What is the best exercise for bone density?

Bones respond to load and impact: strength training and weight-bearing exercise like brisk walking, jogging, dancing, or stair climbing. Swimming and cycling are great for the heart but don't load bone. Two strength sessions a week is the evidence-backed core.

Sources

Written from published menopause research, in plain language — here's how we work. This article shares general information to help you feel informed — it isn't medical advice, and it can't tell you what's happening in your body. Symptoms described here can have causes that have nothing to do with menopause. If a symptom is new, severe, or worrying you, please talk with your doctor or nurse.