
A very seldom mentioned effect of bisphosphonates (drugs such as Fosamax, Actonel, and Boniva) is that these drugs block very important metabolic pathways. Even if you never took bisphosphonates, you will benefit greatly from using this message to improve your health. Perhaps this information is not often brought to light because of its complexity, but I consider this information extremely valuable and would like to share it with you. So let’s get started…
Bisphosphonates can be cataloged as nitrogenous and non-nitrogenous; the former is the most widely prescribed for treating osteoporosis. Like statins – drugs used to lower blood cholesterol levels – nitrogenous bisphosphonates begin their action on bone metabolism by blocking the enzyme farnesyl diphosphate synthase (FPPS) which is involved in the mevalonate pathway (also called the HMG-CoA reductase pathway). I’d like to point out here that while statins disrupt the mevalonate pathway to stop cholesterol synthesis, they do not bind to bone surfaces.
Subsequent inhibited steps of the mevalonate pathway result in osteoclasts that lack a ruffled border and are therefore unable to resorb bone. Bone resorption is necessary for new bone deposition, thus forming healthier and “younger” bone. FPPS, in turn, forms another enzyme, farnesyl diphosphate (FPP). The latter is an important catalyzer for the production of ubiquinone, also recognized as CoQ10 (coenzyme Q10).
In the year 2000, scientists at the Merck Research Laboratories observed the effect of bisphosphonates on laboratory rats, providing the first data of in vivo evidence that these drugs do have an effect on the mevalonate pathway disruption on osteoclast activity. This was published in the Endocrinology Journal, and a few years later, another study was published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry authored by Yan Ling and team, confirming that bisphosphonates are “potent inhibitors of FPPS” and that “FPPS catalyzes the synthesis of farnesyl diphosphate (FPP), an important precursor of sterols, dolichols, ubiquinones, and prenylated proteins.”
In short, bisphosphonates interfere with the production of CoQ10 (ubiquinone), resulting in a potential deficiency that could be damaging. That’s because CoQ10 is an essential fat-soluble vitamin-like antioxidant that is present in practically all cell membranes (thus its name ubiquinone), and is involved in the production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the primary usable energy form by the cell’s mitochondria – the cell’s “power-house” – needed by the cells to perform their tasks.
CoQ10 has many important functions in the body. Once converted into ubiquinol, it operates as an antioxidant on its own and in synergy with Vitamin E, another very important antioxidant. There are several studies that show other benefits of CoQ10 ranging from positive results on cardiac health and endurance training, cancer, diabetes, periodontal disease, and neurological conditions. Further scientific studies need to be done before definite conclusions can be reached, including data interpretation on blood and tissue levels, but common sense would dictate that low levels of CoQ10 are not a desirable condition for anyone.
One important and still unanswered question is the possible link between a higher risk of developing atrial fibrillation (irregular and rapid heartbeat) – a debated possible side effect of bisphosphonates – and low levels of CoQ10 caused by the drugs.
The highest concentrations of CoQ10 in the body are found in organs that require the most energy to function properly such as the heart, the lungs, the kidneys, and the liver. Unfortunately, normal ubiquinone production decreases with age and while it is present in some foods – mainly fish, fish oils, organ meats, and whole grains – the amounts needed are greater than what can be obtained from those sources. It is estimated that a normal dietary intake of CoQ10 is around 10 mg/day of coenzyme. Also, age seems to be a factor in a decreased capacity of converting ubiquinone into ubiquinol.
So what should you do about this, you might ask? Here are some action steps:
- Since foods have low levels of CoQ10, you should take a daily CoQ10 supplement. This applies even if you are not taking bisphosphonates or statins, and especially if you took them in the past.
- CoQ10 supplements are widely available and come in two forms: ubiquinone and ubiquinol. Ubiquinol is the most usable and beneficial form of CoQ10. Taking 100mg of ubiquinol once a day is an excellent supplemental dosage.
- It’s important you get them in gelatin capsule form. Researchers at the State University Hospital in Copenhagen, who have extensively researched CoQ10, recommend it in a soft gelatin capsule for optimal bioavailability. The same study conducted at the hospital found that powder and tablet forms of the supplement had practically no effect on increasing its blood levels.
So there you have it. Now you know a well-kept secret about CoQ10 and osteoporosis drugs. And you also know what you can do to benefit from the amazing energy and vitality it offers.





Dear Vivian,
Thanks for your informative emails. Is it better to take coq10 with meals and other vitamins or should it be taken on an empty stomach? I have never taken them yet but I think I will add it now to my supplement regimen. Thanks and keep up the good work.
Thank you Vivian for all your useful tips to improve bone density without the use of those drugs!
I would like to acquire your book but don’t quite know how to go about it, and would love to be able to borrow it from my excellent local library.
Hope to hear from you again.
Janet.
There was a recent ad in the newspaper here (Western Australia) advising of a new osteoporosis treatment. The ad says “if you have osteoporisis and have received Fosamaz treatment in the last 18 months but have had adverse effects and are not taking your medication as prescribed or had to stop treatment completely you may be able to participate in a one-year trial ……..”
I don’t know what the treatment is, but will phone the given number and advise you when I know something further.
Roma Lester
I would be very interested in the phone number when you find out more information,
Thank you
I would be very interested in the phone number and if you feel it is advantageous to call them.
Dorothy Russ
Hi Vivian:
Just a note to let folks out there know that I also had been on the Boniva IV for about one year and did not like the side effects. It caused swelling in my ankles and, I believe, problems with my veins. After discontinuing it, I had some work done on a tooth and a couple days later started with a terrible pain in the jaw which felt like a toothache. After going back to the dentist he examined me and said that the problem was not with the tooth but in my jaw bone. Since then, after being on the Boniva, I have had jaw problems. I also had spasms in my neck and shoulders and now developed Polymyalgia (terrible pain in neck, shoulders and upper arms). Now I am taking Prednisone for the Polymyalgia and wonder if all this didn’t start as the result of the Boniva.
My doctors want me to take Reclast now. I refuse. I would like to get off the Prednisone as it is no doublt causing further Osteoporosis problems and Cataracts. Now I am in the process of having cataract surgery. I am suffering with terrible heartburn after each meal and not getting relief from Previcid. I am trying to do your PH diet and hope that will help.
Did you get my message? Igot cut off/
Jeanie,
Just watch your Previcid–it may interfere with your Vitamin D levels which will hinder your bones. I struggled for a year or so to bring my Vitamin D level up but it is still not in “normal range”.
Lin ps: I have taken CoQ10 for years! Glad to hear it is still a positive!
Hi Jean,
I am amazed! Your letter could be talking about me! I too have Polymyalgia and come to think of it, I do believe it started after I had been on Alendronate sodium for a few months. (Which I have stopped taking) I am also on Prednisone and like you, trying to wean off it. I also have reflux desease and taking meds for that, phleabitis and swelling ankles. Most of the time I just feel very “unwell”, have no energy and pop pain pills like candy just to get around. I tell my family, if I were a horse they would shoot me….(don’t mean any offence to you horse lovers out there.)
I wish you all the best and hope you will get off the prednisone soon. Hang in there….. Sandie
Thank you very much for this research, Vivian. I need all the evidence I can get, when I keep resisting my MD’s periodic recommendation of drugs. Although my Osteoporosis seems to be caused by an endochrine situation, which has no easy solution, I am still resisting Osteoporosis drugs. Erika
Vivian, Most of what was todays mail, I didnot know. I have been on Bonivia for about a year and I believe that it has caused my stomach problem to be worse as I now take 2 Protonixes a day for heart burn. After reading your mail today, i am going to decline from taking any more of it and will ask for another bone density test to actually see if it “did” any good in the year that I have taken it. If it did good then, I will go back to taking it but wont if it hasnt. I am on about 14 different meds from heart problems to bone density. I am so tired of pills that I could scream but am afraid to do without them, I am almost 78 years of age and until one of the meds put me in a coma about 3 years ago, was in good shape and did what I wanted when i wanted even making love with my “Guy”, I am a widow, but since then i just dont have the strength to do much of any thing enjoyable. ughhhhhhh, not much of a life here.
Things doesnt seem to be getting any better.
Thanks for all the help that you do for everyone.
Sincerly, Sarah
Vivian,
Thank you for your incredible job of research that you have been doing.
I am 84 and have Osteoarthritis with sclerosis for nine years. I was taking Fosamax, but only a short time as, my Doctor told me to stop. I also have Atrial Fibrillation, which I am working on right now.
Thank you for your great material,
Audrey
Dear Vivian Thank you for the E-mail about CoQ10. I have been taking it for about 10 years.I have been off Boniva for close to 4 months.I can’t tell you how wonderful I feel. No more gastric problems and a general malaise that I couldn’t put my finger on.Only now that I am off Boniva that I realize that the meds were the problem. I owe it all to you Vivian , because if I hadn’t found your website I would have continued to be intimidated by the blatant lies of my doctor! I have your book and I am so encouraged that I can take care of my health in a natural way. Thank you again Vivian. Gerri
Vivian,
You really don’t want to be taking any vitamin or coQ10 with soybean oil or soy lecithin as fillers. Soy is known for adding to thyroid problems, and there are other reasons to be sure that none of our vitamins have soy fillers. Too lengthy to go into here.
If we can only get a dry coQ10, then it is good to have oil, or some type of fat before taking it, for better absorption. I take a fish oil pill with my coQ10, and then the fat is covered.
Thanks for all the information you give us.
I just read Roger Mason’s (chemical researcher and nutrition advisor of Young Again products) article on CoQ10. He disagrees w/you on the best form to take. He said that ubiquinone is the best. And CoQ10 should be from a Japanese source. Also he recommends taking it w/ flax oil.
Vivian, To be honest I have just been glancing at your e letters since I have had good reports on Forteo in regard to my bone density as much as a 5.2 growth to the femer bone and 4 to the rest of the sine and skeletel bones. I have slso been taking mega doses of calcium with D followed by Magnesium Aspartine in the evening. Now comes the question Wash U MO is doing an independent study of this 18 month episode because they believe it helps plaque not to build up in your veins and arterries. Is this true or are there other things that they are checkig for in this study.
Thank you for your informative letterrs,
Joseph Panke
I am currently taking CO Q10 100 mg. per day. I took Fosamax, Miacalcin, Boniva, Actonel, and Reclast over the last 10 years and have neck and jaw problems as a result. I am glad to know I am on the right track.
Hi Vivian,
I have been reading all of the info. you have been
sending us. I have read some of your readers
complaints about neck and shoulder pains. I have been on Boniva for about two years. The past couple of months my neck and shoulders have been bothering me. My neck even makes a knuckle cracking sometimes when I turn my head. Could this all be from the Boniva?
Thank you so much for your research Vivian.
I am a 64 year old male and take a statin for slightly high cholesterol.
I am now doing my own research as to whether or not I should go through standard procedures for reducing cholesterol.
At present I am in great shape but an an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
Keep up with your work. I talk to my friends about your article.
Hi: I’ve been on Foxamax for several years, after a right hip and right femur fracture. I have bone densitiy studies done each year, still am losing bone.
Meanwhile I need a surgical implant to replace a lower molar. The DDS sent me to get a fasting blood test. He said I need to be off Fosamax for at least 3 mo, and possible closer to 7 mo in case I am a candidate for this implant.
I am 72, and am really amazed that no one has mentioned to me the dangers of this Fosamax. In addition—-
my DR has me taking synthroid, and he can’t balance the TSH, T3, and T4. Even did a neuclear thyroid scan.
If I start taking CoQ10, in gel form, should I expect to feel any better soon? and I have scheduled Aug 7, another bond density study.
I take many vitamins, in addition to milk thistle, and liveraid, as I was a recepient of blood in 1985, and got Hepatitis C from this.
Your advice please….
Connie
Thanks Vivian, for giving helpful direction to all of us interested in bone health! All this information is so timely for me. I am a 51 year old athelete/farmer trying to deal with stress fractures in my entire right leg for the last 5 months. Your advice has made a huge difference this month in my recovery, so the use of drugs will never be used.
I believe the most important things are becoming alkaline with food, taking more than lots of minerals that the bones need to rebuild. Always keeping up the protein and carbohydrates for supporting muscles, and bone. And of course Rest and slow down, even before pain is likely to show up with use.
My doctor said I was a good candidate to take Fosamax, Actonel or his preferred method – an annual shot of something – I can’t recall the name. He explained osteoclasts and osteoblasts & asked me to think about it, and to check with my health care plan for coverage.
I was given some information from my sister and she recommended your site to me. I like how you explain osteoclasts and osteoblasts the same way my doctor explained them to me, except you elaborate what really happens in your bones. I appreciate your explanations as they make sense. I have decided to hold off any medication and try your methods until my next bone density in Aug 2010. If it improves, I’ll be a fan for life and will be on your bandwagon trying to help others. I have enjoyed reading your very well written information and plan to order your book as well. Thank you for your timely info. (Please do not add me to any email list however)
I have read all the post. I am 51 and have severe osterporis in my back. Dr wants me to Forte Shots. Did 2 years Fosamax. 2 years Bonvia.
Just started 2 months ago with holistic nurturist who follows Dr Brownstein and Bio Identialcals. I feel better but am still scared of condition of bones and pressured by Dr and Insurance to start the forte. Anyone have some thoughts or anything they can share.
Hi Cyndi, I am 56 and also have severe osteoporisis in my back. I have been having shots of Bonviva that made me feel awful. I was not aware of the awful side effects of this drug (I have mentioned this a couple of times on this site before). I was due to have another shot this month. I am going to decline. I am not worried about what the doctor says – it is my body and he chose not to tell me how the product he was using could affect me, he just told me it would improve my bone density. Yes, I too am scared (who wouldn’t be if they find out that the bones in their spine are weak?) but I am going to try the natural way. Perhaps we could compare notes?
Hi Chris,
Hurrah to you, as in my previous post. I will add that also when I asked my woman doctor about any side effect to Fosamax, She told me basically there was none.
Even when I got Osteonecrosis of the Jaw, she told me I needed to continue on otherwise My bones would get weak. Funny that when I asked for all my bone density records,. my bones got worse each year of being on the drug. Drugs are big business in this country and it’s more about making money, then making people healthy.
I’m almost 65 and taking charge of my bone health without pills.
Thank you , vivian.
Marie M.
Unsure of your health other than what you mention, but personally having a thyroid problem (and osteoporosis, etc.), am aware taking Synthroid (sp?) for thyroid is know to cause osteoporosis of the spine. Just thot that might interest you.
Marie……………..I have been on Forteo for nearly a year. Next month I will have my first bone density test since starting this treatment.
I’ll let you know the results. I had been on fosomax and actonel for nearly 10 years and my bones got worse! And the acid reflux side effect required yet more medication! I had also been taking Premarin which had obviously been protecting my bones. When I quit taking the hormones due to fear of blood clots, my bones got worse. I do have some leg pain from the Forteo but no other side effects. I am anxious for my test next month!
i TOOK THE FORTEO FOR 2 YEARS AND RECENTLY HAD TO HAVE SURGERY FOR THE HARDENING OFMY INTESTINES AND A SMALL BOWEL RESECTION. I have a feeling this was caused by the forteo but I do not know how to prove it. I almost died.
I, too, take CoQ10. And my Dr. once asked (when I said NO to taking any Osteo drugs) “why do you bother coming to me”. I was also told I needed Cholesterol lowering meds and refuse to take them. Once I read your book, and did some additional research on acid/Alkalizing foods, I was hooked. Test my PH each morning and am pleased to say that since changing my diet, I now test above 7.2 each and every AM. I do 100 “steps” on my stepper each day, and just learned that wall push-up were good for building bone density, so have added that, along with hand weights. THANK YOU for these news letters. I feel so encouraged!!!!! (I am 68 years young) BLESSINGS TO YOU, VIVIAN.
I, too, take CoQ10. And my Dr. once asked (when I said NO to taking any Osteo drugs) “why do you bother coming to me”. I was also told I needed Cholesterol lowering meds and refuse to take them. Once I read your book, and did some additional research on acid/Alkalizing foods, I was hooked. Test my PH each morning and am pleased to say that since changing my diet, I now test above 7.2 each and every AM. I do 100 “steps” on my stepper each day, and just learned that wall push-up were good for building bone density, so have added that, along with hand weights. THANK YOU for these news letters. I feel so encouraged!!!!!
Stop sending e-mails to me!
Hi Julia
Just read your comments on the blog. Please could you tell me how to test PH I asked my pharmacist who didn’t know what I was talking about. Is there a brand name you could let me have
Jill
Hi Vivian,
My doc recently prescribed Actonel for me, I researched it and run across your site. I had filled the prescription but did not take it….sure am glad that I researched it first. I also ordered your book, it is very informative. I have been taking CoQ10 for several years but did not know it is good for the bones also. I am 63 years old and in good health. My only prescribed meds are synthroid for my thyroid and now I am concerned about it causing problems for my bones.Thanks again for the good information.
Vivian, I’m adding this information on Ubiquinol to all other help received to date. It certainly indicates the complexity of biological issues ~ and hence the need for biochemists! My current puzzle is how to get the right quantities of all recommended supplements without taking every one separately. The next one is whether the budget can cope with another regular one! I”ll work this out. In the meantime, my thanks for continuing support.
Check out: Puritan’s Pride.com for very affordable supplements.
I have your book and after reading it, I took myself off of Fosamax which I had been taking for almost 10 years. I am now taking natural supplements and eating a very healthy diet. I enjoy your articles so much and found the article on Ubiquinol very interesting. I take COQ10 on a regular basis but am now going to switch to Ubiquinol. Thank you again for all the information you provide us.
I have your book and after reading it, I took myself off of Fosamax which I had been taking for almost 10 years. I am now taking natural supplements and eating a very healthy diet. I enjoy your articles so much and found the article on Ubiquinol very interesting. I take COQ10 on a regular basis but am now going to switch to Ubiquinol. Thank you again for all the information you provide us.
Thank you so much for your valuable information about the bones and health. I’ve been taking Co Q-10 for years to protect my heart. And from your email I learnt this new even better form called “Ubiquinol”.
From now on I am going to switch to this new form of supplement. Thanks again for your hard work.
I just completed reading “The Bone Health Revolution” and I’m impressed with its simplicity and factual information. The book provides a detailed look into the acid/alkaline principles, the dangers of bisphosphonate drugs and the secrets to strong bones. Believing in you and the information you offered in this book as well as the current helpful articles gave me the courage to stop taking Fosamax – have been on this medication since 10/01 and was informed I would be on it for the rest of my life.
Thank you for giving me the courage to get off this drug – using a safe and effective alternative to building strong bones makes more sense. I am very grateful for the knowledge you provide your readers. Keep up the good work.
Hi Vivian
Great info on CO Q-10 I am intending to take it also, I am encouraged and stimulated by you continual contact with relevent information that will help me attain good health.
You are a life line in a storm of ignorance and confusion in the search for optimal wellbeing. Keep up the good work Joy
I heard about you just when I found out I had osteoporosis. My doctor wanted to put me on actonel. I said no. Shortly there after I missed the last two steps from a basement stairs. I lit very hard on a cement floor. No bones were broken. I did have a huge bruise on my right hip. I also had pain in my groin. I used a cane for two months. I’m completely healed. Thank you for keeping us updated. And thank you for your book.
Vivian
Thanks for the new information. I have read your book and am trying to eat more plants! Need to build my bones!
I was diagnosed with osteoporosis and doctor recommended Fosamax which I took for 3 years. When getting my yearly checkup (I had read your book), I told him I was not taking Fosamax anymore. Was okay with him. He suggested more Vitamins C and D than I was currently taking. He did suggest, then, a bone scan which he wanted to compare with one a year from now to see how I am doing without the Foxamax. This current bone scan showed even worse osteoporosis than the one I had before taking the Foxamax. So Fosamax only made my back worse. I knew it was worse, because it hurt so badly. Thank you so much not only for your book, but for these updates. I have been wearing the wrist and ankle weights, alternately, and feel I am getting more strength in arms and legs. I will get the UBIQUINAL and start taking the 50 mg of that. I don’t think I mentioned that I am very active at 84 years old. Thank you again, dear one. Edline
Dear Vivian:
Thank you for information concerning CQ10. I have learned that the statin drugs deplete you body from CQ10, and thereby leave you open for heart problems. I am not taking any of this supplement, men after reading you article, I will certainly get it at the healthstore on my next trip.
I ordered your book but have not received as yet.
Your updates are very informative and very much appreciated. One of my friends has been getting reclast because taking the other osteoporosis drugs by mouth caused her digestive problems. She was just diagnosed with thyroid cancer and her doctors are worried that the cancer has spresd into her lymph glands. I have a feeling that the reclast treatments and the other osteoporosis drugs she’s taken over the years has contributed to her problems, including losing her hair. Thanks for all your great research!
Dear Vivian,
Thanks for the information. I have your book and have now ordered the CoQ10.
I appreciate so much your keeping us informed.
Glenda
Very interesting information. I’ve just been diagnosed with osteoperosis and am trying to find other means of treatment besides Fosomax, Boniva, etc. I’ve heard that vitamin K2 has been found to be helpful. What do you know about this natural supplement and its effects on treating the condition?
Hi Vivian
thank you for all your information about the osteoporosis drugs. I was diagnosed with servere osteoporosis in 2001. I have been prescribed Adcal, Fosamax, Actonel, & the lastest Protelos. Thankfully I have always refused to take these drugs because of what I have read about the side effects. (to the doctors I am a rebel). reading all your information about these drugs I am so pleased I have not taken them.
My last bone scan says there is more loss & the consultant puts this down to the thyroid tablet that I take. 4 private specialist say I need this drug but the National Healthe Service (G.B) say I do not need it. I have been taking Euthyrox 150mg for a few years & have felt so well, (prescribed in Germany by a doctor, who say this is much better than the English thyroxin) because the consultant said it was this drug that is suppressing the bone growth. I am very concerned & frighten so I have cut in down by half, to 75mg. I now feel awful, have a constant headache, feel depressed, no get up & go. Please could you tell me if the thyroid tablets are really causing this problem with the bones, & my problems are the stress of what is happening to me?
Thank you for your time & I look forward to hearing from you.
Jean Carlisle (Great Britain)
Hello Jean. I also have to take thhyroid medication and would like to know if tis does indeed ave a bad effect on my bones. I HAVE SEVERE OSTEOPOROSIS and am giving up taking Fosamax as of now but must stay on the thyroid pills since I have been on these for over 10 years
Not sure how what you take relates to Synthroid, but Synthroid is known to cause osteoporosis of the spine. Thyroid problems and Osteoporosis can be related from bodies lack of ability to absorb calcium, as in my case. I refused meds, and Dr would not work w/me on alternatives, so studied everything I could get my hands on, and make no apology for commenting that I prayed a lot…found answers, PTL! When I went back to be tested 1.5 years later I was told by the same people that what ever I was doing…KEEP DOING IT!!! Even your heart is good!!! Unless you have had your thyroid removed try building up with supplements, diet, exercise. Then very gradually cut back on meds. But best is find an Alternative Dr to help you with it…I would stress, DO NOT try to do it on your own. Took me two years, and a number of consultations w/a few incompetents (which you soon can tell) before I found a MD turned Holistic Dr to give me confidence I was going in the right direction, and help me. DIET IS MOST IMPORTANT!
I have been taken Q10 for more than a year, but I did’nt know it helps with bones
Thank you Vivian I will by the one you recomended.You are so inteligent and concern about us. I would like to meet you one of the days when I visit my daughter in Ftlauderdale.
Hi Vivian
Thank you for the article. I appreciate all of the time and energy you spend on research and getting the information out to all of us. I took Actonel/Boniva for six years. Like many, I thought I was building bone. I didn’t realize until I read your book that I was actually killing cells in my body that are necessary for bone resporbtion. I will never take another bisphosphonate.
Thank you, Vivian. Actually I’ve been taking Swanson’s “Q-Gel Mega 100. This is a gel capsule for bioavailability, and I’m just ready to order some more. I had been taking 60 mg for a couple of years, and decided to up the amount.
Thank you for the information, and glad I’m doing another thing that can help.
Rolande
Hi Vivian :o)
That is a very interesting article. I appreciate your emails very much and all the help that you give to me and other patients who were put on those terrible drugs.
I do believe that we are indeed guinea pigs, my husband, who won’t even take a Disprin for a headache, says, ” it came by itself and can go away by itself”. He probably is correct, who knows? but can it help all of us now who have been on bisphosphonates for years?… Hopefully now stopping them will, and our bones will get back to what they should be.
It will be a long time yet before I see my Rheumatologist and it will also be interesting to hear what she has to say, now she knows that I no longer take Bonviva, and will never ever contemplate taking such a drug again.
have a nice day :o)
Marysia
Hi Vivian, Just want to say I have appreciated your research very much and miss the e-mails. Thankyou. Marlene
HI Evelyn, Thank you for you message om CQ10. My husband takes 1 gel cap a day, recpmmended by his ophthalmollogist. he is losing sight in his L eye after serval surgeries & there isn’t much they can do for him. I will definitely try the ubiquinol for osteoporosis.
You do such great research and I,among many, appreciate all your suggestions.
Thank you so much.
Joan Miller
Hi Dave,
I have not noticed any problems.
Reading the many comments above it seems that most DO NOT get any replies.
I hope I do.
Reason there are not replies is that 10 people must vote for Vivian to reply to that question, but I see very few votes. Consequently you can’t expect a reply, right?
I agree with the earlier post by Yvonne White that 300 mg/day of ubiquinol is the proper dose for someone age 60 or older. I’d like to add that bone metabolism is 40% of the bodies energy expenditure. Metabolism capacity declines to half at age sixty due to a lack of ubiquinol. There are no studies to support but logic suggests that ubiquinol supplements go a long way toward maintaining bone density.
WOULD BE INTERESTED IN REPLY TO CECIL FARRIS AS MY WIFE WAS ALSO ON FORTEO FOR OVER A YEAR.WE RECENTLY STOPPED THE SHOTS AND HAVE NOTICED IMPROVEMENT IN HER ALERTNESS AND LESS STOMACH UPSETS.
Vivian
Dave, I read your email about your wife and her stomach upsets. My sister took Boniva and started having severe direah after eating. She’s been experiancing this for several years even though she stopped taking Boniva. The docs put her on Estiva (SP) to replace Boniva and she has stopped taking that too, 2 or 3 months ago, but is still having the problem. Is this what your wife experienced and what was the treatment? I would appreciate any information on this from you Vivaian and Dave. Please send your response to my email address. Thanks
I am 75, male and have been using Forteo (daily self injection) for about 14 months. 2 years is the max Time allowed.
What is your opinion of this drug?
Dear Vivian
As a result of your advie I stopped taking Actonel abou six months ago. I was getting a sore jaw but since stopping this is almost back to normal.
I feel I should be taking something to help with my osteporosis but dont know what.Any suggestions.
Fantastic article, Viv. Thank you once again for the extremely valuable information that few if any doctors probably even know. I am scheduled in August for a hip replacement (from long time wear on the joint due to my scoliosis) and this will be a wonderful supplement to help strengthen my body to be ready for surgery. Thank you again.
Since the use of comfrey has been associated with serious liver damage, ingestion of comfrey is not recommended. The FDA has issued a warning to consumers that the use of comfrey may present a serious health hazard. Also, the topical application of comfrey preparations to broken skin should be avoided.
Comfrey has been associated with cases of severe liver damage. Notify your doctor immediately if you develop nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, unusual fatigue, loss of appetite, yellow skin or eyes, itching, dark urine, or clay colored stools. These symptoms may be early signs of liver damage.
Comfrey has not been evaluated by the FDA for safety, effectiveness, or purity. All potential risks and/or advantages of comfrey may not be known. Additionally, there are no regulated manufacturing standards in place for these compounds. There have been instances where herbal/health supplements have been sold which were contaminated with toxic metals or other drugs. Herbal/health supplements should be purchased from a reliable source to minimize the risk of contamination.
Connie, while what you mention may be true, be careful how you read FDA “disapprovals”. Natural herbs cannot be patented, not much money in them for Drug Companies who want to push their wares. So research that may prove comfrey root effective might be avoided, played down, or the results remain unpublished. And in some cases it’s been proven that similar studies have been misrepresented by FDA, with arm twisting from Big Pharma.
Hi Vivian, Thanks for all the emails – I find them very informative. I’m confused about the amount of COQ10 to take. You mentioned that you take 50 mg a day but the brand you recommended suggests up to 300 mg a day. Also like many others have mentioned, I am wondering how one reads your responses to the many questions that are asked. Hope to hear from you soon.
I also take 100mg of co-Q10 in softgels,is that enough? It also contains soy.I heard that soy isn’t good for you if you have thyroid problems. Carol Reed
Hi Vivian
Thank you for your email and all information.I will buy what your suggested CQ10.
Thank you very much for your loving caring and sharing. It is a great help.
It was nice hearing from you again.
Best regards
Clara
Dear Vivian, thank you for all the articles, keep them coming. I have osteoporosis, the bone doctor wanted me to take biphosphonates but, I went to my GP and told her what I had found out, both from your emails and my own research. She was very supportive, told me that these drugs are not nice to take and that I know my own body and symptoms better than anyone and that if I want to do my own research, that’s fine and she will support me. How lucky am I?? So please, keep the emails coming. Alison x
Vivian, I saw that one of the women wrote in saying that she had a stress fracture in one of her femurs. I haven’t heard of anyone except myself with that problem. I have “twin femur fractures.” I would like to talk to her and get some information about what she did to heal and how long it has been. Is there some way that can happen. I see several questions that were asked that I would like to hear your answers. How does one do that? Joan Shippen