The Silent Consequence of Menopause Most Women Don’t Think About Until It’s Too Late
When women think about menopause, they typically focus on the most visible symptoms — hot flashes, sleep problems, mood changes. What tends to get less attention is one of the most medically significant consequences of the hormonal changes of menopause: accelerated bone loss, leading to osteoporosis.
Osteoporosis is often called the ‘silent disease’ because it progresses without symptoms until a fracture occurs. By the time a woman breaks a hip or vertebra, she may have already lost 30 to 50 percent of her peak bone mass. The good news is that this loss is measurable, preventable to a significant degree, and treatable. The key is knowing when to assess, when to intervene, and how.
How Menopause Accelerates Bone Loss
Bone is living tissue — constantly being broken down by cells called osteoclasts and rebuilt by cells called osteoblasts. In healthy young adults, these processes are in balance. Estrogen plays a critical role in maintaining this balance by suppressing osteoclast activity. When estrogen levels fall at menopause, the brake on bone breakdown is released, and bone loss accelerates dramatically.
In the first five to seven years after menopause, women typically lose bone density at a rate of one to three percent per year — compared to roughly 0.3 to 0.5 percent per year in premenopausal women. Over this critical early postmenopausal window, it’s possible to lose 20 percent or more of total bone mass. This is why the years immediately surrounding menopause are the most important for bone health intervention.
Over the long term, approximately one in two women over age 50 will have an osteoporosis-related fracture in her lifetime. Hip fractures are the most serious — associated with significant morbidity, loss of independence, and in older women, increased mortality. Vertebral fractures cause chronic pain, loss of height, and postural changes. Wrist fractures are extremely common in women in their 50s and 60s as they instinctively break falls.
Risk Factors for Osteoporosis
While menopause itself is the single greatest risk factor for bone loss in women, several additional factors increase the risk of developing osteoporosis and fracturing. These include family history of osteoporosis or hip fracture; low body weight or a history of eating disorders; prolonged corticosteroid use; smoking; heavy alcohol use; low calcium and vitamin D intake or absorption; a personal history of fracture after age 40; and medical conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, and thyroid disorders.
Race also plays a role: White and Asian women have higher osteoporosis rates than Black and Hispanic women, though all women experience significant bone loss with menopause and no group is exempt from risk.
Premature or early menopause (before age 45) is a particularly significant risk factor, because it extends the lifetime duration of low estrogen. Women with premature ovarian insufficiency or early surgical menopause should be evaluated for bone health early and are generally encouraged to use hormone therapy until the average age of natural menopause (around 51) unless there is a specific contraindication.
Bone Density Testing: When and How
Bone mineral density (BMD) is measured using a DXA (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry) scan — a low-radiation imaging test that typically takes 10 to 20 minutes and measures bone density in the hip and spine. Results are reported as T-scores: a T-score above -1.0 is normal; between -1.0 and -2.5 is osteopenia (below normal but not yet osteoporosis); and -2.5 or below is osteoporosis.
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) and National Osteoporosis Foundation recommend routine bone density screening for all women age 65 and older. Screening earlier — at menopause or shortly after — is recommended for women with significant risk factors. Women with premature menopause or early menopause should have baseline BMD testing at the time of diagnosis.
The FRAX tool (Fracture Risk Assessment Tool), developed by the WHO, uses BMD along with other clinical risk factors to calculate a 10-year probability of major osteoporotic fracture and hip fracture. Your gynecologist or primary care provider can use this to help determine whether you need pharmacological treatment for bone loss.
Calcium and Vitamin D: The Foundation
Adequate calcium and vitamin D are the nutritional foundation of bone health at every stage of life, and their importance only increases after menopause. The National Osteoporosis Foundation recommends 1,200 mg of calcium daily for women over 50, ideally from food sources (dairy products, fortified foods, leafy greens, almonds, canned fish with bones). Calcium supplements can fill gaps but should not exceed 500 to 600 mg per dose and should be taken with food to maximize absorption.
Vitamin D is essential for calcium absorption in the gut. The recommended daily intake for women over 50 is at least 800 to 1,000 IU of vitamin D3 per day, with higher amounts often needed for women with low serum 25-OH vitamin D levels. Given that the Houston area and much of Texas has sun year-round, vitamin D deficiency may be less common than in northern states, but it’s still prevalent and should be checked through routine labs.
Exercise for Bone Health
Physical activity is one of the most powerful tools for maintaining and even modestly improving bone density after menopause. Weight-bearing exercise — activities where you are on your feet and your bones support your body weight, including walking, hiking, dancing, tennis, and resistance training — directly stimulates bone-forming cells. Resistance training (weights, resistance bands, bodyweight exercises) is particularly effective because muscle contraction pulls on bone, stimulating remodeling.
Balance and coordination exercises — yoga, tai chi, balance boards — reduce fall risk, which is critically important since fractures require both weak bones and a fall. A program that combines weight-bearing aerobic activity, resistance training, and balance exercises is the most comprehensive approach to bone health.
Hormone Therapy and Bone Protection
Hormone therapy is one of the most effective means of preventing bone loss in recently menopausal women. The 2022 NAMS guidelines confirm that HT has been shown to prevent bone loss and fracture, and FDA-approved indications for HT specifically include prevention of postmenopausal osteoporosis. For women who have menopausal symptoms AND bone loss concerns, HT addresses both simultaneously — a meaningful advantage.
For women who are not candidates for hormone therapy, several other FDA-approved medications can treat osteoporosis. Bisphosphonates (alendronate, risedronate, zoledronic acid) inhibit osteoclast activity and are first-line pharmacological treatment for most postmenopausal women with osteoporosis. Denosumab is another option that works through a different mechanism. Newer anabolic agents (teriparatide, romosozumab) actually stimulate new bone formation and are reserved for women with severe osteoporosis or those who have not responded to other treatments.
A Proactive Approach Pays Off
Osteoporosis is largely preventable when addressed early, and manageable when identified on DXA before fractures occur. The time to think about bone health is not after a fracture — it’s during perimenopause and the early postmenopausal years, when bone loss is most rapid and intervention is most effective.
Our gynecology team in Sugar Land and Missouri City integrates bone health into our menopause care discussions routinely. We’ll help you understand your personal risk factors, determine when bone density testing is appropriate, and discuss all your options for protecting your skeletal health in the decades ahead.







