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⚠️ MEDICAL EDUCATION DISCLAIMER This video provides educational information about nutrition and bone density for women 50+. All content is based on peer-reviewed research and does not replace personalized medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your diet or supplement regimen, especially if you have a history of osteoporosis, hormone-sensitive conditions, hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer, cardiovascular disease, or take medications including HRT, warfarin, NOACs, bisphosphonates, tamoxifen, or aromatase inhibitors. Individual results vary. This content is intended for post-menopausal and perimenopausal women interested in evidence-based health information. Women who ate just four to six prunes a day preserved their total hip bone mineral density over twelve months in a randomized controlled trial. Not slowed the loss. Preserved it. The control group — taking calcium and vitamin D — continued losing bone. If you have never heard that finding before, this video is exactly what you need to watch. 📚 RESEARCH CITED IN THIS VIDEO: Primary Studies: De Souza et al. (2022). American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Penn State Prune Study: 235 postmenopausal women over 12 months; 50g daily prunes preserved total hip bone mineral density versus continued loss in calcium and vitamin D controls; 90.2% compliance. Koltun and colleagues (2024). Osteoporosis International. Secondary pQCT analysis of Penn State Prune Study: pooled prune groups preserved cortical volumetric bone density and estimated bone strength at the tibia. Kanadys et al. (2021). Journal of Clinical Medicine. Meta-analysis of 18 RCTs on soy isoflavones in postmenopausal women: 106mg daily isoflavones produced statistically significant lumbar spine BMD improvement of positive 1.63%. Inpan et al. (2024). Osteoporosis International. Meta-analysis of 63 RCTs on soy isoflavones in postmenopausal women: confirmed bone protection and documented 23% decrease in bone resorption marker DPD versus baseline. Zhang et al. (2020). Calcified Tissue International. Four-arm RCT, 311 adults aged 50 to 75: 90mcg MK-7 vitamin K2 significantly reduced femoral neck bone loss in postmenopausal women; carboxylated to undercarboxylated osteocalcin ratio improved significantly. Liu et al. (2025). Frontiers in Nutrition. NHANES cross-sectional analysis, 8,889 adults: women in highest omega-3 intake quartile had 35% lower odds of osteoporosis versus lowest quartile with consistent dose-response relationship. ⚠️ IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION: This video discusses general dietary principles for post-menopausal women. You should: Consult your oncologist before significantly increasing soy food intake if you have a history of estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer or currently take tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors — evidence on whole food soy safety in this population is actively debated and requires individual medical guidance Keep prune and leafy green intake consistent rather than variable if you take warfarin due to vitamin K1 interactions with anticoagulation — NOACs including Eliquis, Xarelto, and Pradaxa have no vitamin K food interaction Keep total supplemental calcium below 1,000mg daily based on 2024 cardiovascular signal data for high-dose calcium supplements specifically — prioritize food calcium first Choose calcium citrate over calcium carbonate if supplementing, as citrate does not require stomach acid for absorption and stomach acid production typically declines after 50 Women with established osteoporosis with T-score below negative 2.5 require pharmacological treatment alongside dietary changes — food-based intervention is beneficial but not sufficient as a standalone when fracture risk is high Seek urgent medical attention for sudden mid-spine or lower back pain, hip pain after a minor stumble, significant height loss versus young adult height, or wrist fracture from a fall Get regular DXA scans, bone turnover marker testing, and vitamin D blood level monitoring — target 25-hydroxyvitamin D between 40 and 60 nanograms per milliliter #DrHelenMarlowe #WomensHealthOver50 #MenopauseResearch #EvidenceBasedHealth #Menopause #PostMenopause #BoneHealth #Osteoporosis #BoneDensity #OsteocalcinHealth #VitaminK2Bones #SoyIsoflavonesBone #PrunesForBones #MenopauseNutrition #AntiInflammatoryDiet #WomenOver50 #MenopauseSupport #WellnessOver50 #HealthyAging #WomensWellness #Longevity #Hormones #BoneStrength #FracturePreventionWomen #PostMenopauseBoneHealth ⚠️ Copyright & Fair Use Notice: All medical information, research studies, and clinical data presented fall under fair use for educational commentary and analysis. Images used are either original content, licensed stock, or properly attributed. No copyright infringement intended. © 2026 Dr. Helen Marlowe Health Research. Educational women's health content for adults 50+.