Olden Dazed
New Member
Hello again. Hope everyone's well.
Last year, my wife began taking Mounjaro for type 2 diabetes, and was at the maximum dose of 15 mg once a week on 10/15/2025, when she got results of "lowest T-score of -2.4 at left femoral neck" on a DEXA axial scan. She lost a total of 97 pounds on Mounjaro, and her blood sugar has never been better, but at no time did the prescribing doctor warn her about the onset of severe osteoporosis as a result of her bones bearing so much lighter a load.
She had a recent consult with an endocrine specialist, who wants her to jump straight onto Forteo. The doc gave her the impression that she was in serious enough condition to be at death's door. Forteo scares her due to her family history of Alzheimer's, and she's not a candidate for Tymlos due to her cardiac history. Plus, the bisphosphonates all scare her. Meanwhile, in our town, where all the healthcare providers are overburdened, she can't get in for a physical therapy evaluation until July.
So she has some questions about osteoporosis treatment:
(1) At no time did anyone tell her how serious (or not) the above score is. We're told the success of any treatment can depend heavily on how the news of the diagnosis is broken to the patient. (For example, a diabetes diagnosis can be presented as a near disaster, and the patient's fault ... or the doctor/nurse can be decent enough to reassure the patient that a blood sugar level is just a number, and not attach any baggage about the patient's character to it.)
(2) Are there any reputable, honest sources of information on conventional and alternative treatments? So far, from what we've seen online, the MD's hate the holistic practitioners, and the latter hate the former just as much. (And of course, she doesn't want to become a cash cow for Big Pharma.)
At present, she's started wearing 2.5-pound ankle weights and is contemplating the use of a 12-pound weighted vest (if she can start safely at that weight). She's also begun taking calcium citrate supplements.
Any advice on how to navigate this maze is greatly appreciated. Any good books would be especially helpful.
Thanks -- Olden Dazed
P.S. If anyone wants to beat the price of full-brand Citracal, Wal-Mart's Spring Valley brand is $9.63 for three hundred 600-mg tablets.
Last year, my wife began taking Mounjaro for type 2 diabetes, and was at the maximum dose of 15 mg once a week on 10/15/2025, when she got results of "lowest T-score of -2.4 at left femoral neck" on a DEXA axial scan. She lost a total of 97 pounds on Mounjaro, and her blood sugar has never been better, but at no time did the prescribing doctor warn her about the onset of severe osteoporosis as a result of her bones bearing so much lighter a load.
She had a recent consult with an endocrine specialist, who wants her to jump straight onto Forteo. The doc gave her the impression that she was in serious enough condition to be at death's door. Forteo scares her due to her family history of Alzheimer's, and she's not a candidate for Tymlos due to her cardiac history. Plus, the bisphosphonates all scare her. Meanwhile, in our town, where all the healthcare providers are overburdened, she can't get in for a physical therapy evaluation until July.
So she has some questions about osteoporosis treatment:
(1) At no time did anyone tell her how serious (or not) the above score is. We're told the success of any treatment can depend heavily on how the news of the diagnosis is broken to the patient. (For example, a diabetes diagnosis can be presented as a near disaster, and the patient's fault ... or the doctor/nurse can be decent enough to reassure the patient that a blood sugar level is just a number, and not attach any baggage about the patient's character to it.)
(2) Are there any reputable, honest sources of information on conventional and alternative treatments? So far, from what we've seen online, the MD's hate the holistic practitioners, and the latter hate the former just as much. (And of course, she doesn't want to become a cash cow for Big Pharma.)
At present, she's started wearing 2.5-pound ankle weights and is contemplating the use of a 12-pound weighted vest (if she can start safely at that weight). She's also begun taking calcium citrate supplements.
Any advice on how to navigate this maze is greatly appreciated. Any good books would be especially helpful.
Thanks -- Olden Dazed
P.S. If anyone wants to beat the price of full-brand Citracal, Wal-Mart's Spring Valley brand is $9.63 for three hundred 600-mg tablets.