Osteopenia and riding

Zalie

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At the (comparatively!) young age of 41 I was diagnosed with osteopenia (pre-osteoporosis) in my hips. My spine is fine, and one year on I'm still not on any treatment yet, with a review due in a few months.

Has anybody here experience of riding with osteopenia? Will it be helpful or not for building/maintaining bone density and strength? (I have googled, but the main info I've found is about full blown osteoporosis and advice to 'not fall off').

I haven't ridden since I was about 12, but as my children are now getting into riding themselves, I'm feeling the pull to get back on a horse. Is this a stupid idea, or not?!

Thanks for any and all advice :)
 
I have osteopenia. I was diagnosed following a catastrophic fall aged 51 where I fractured my wrist & 4 vertebrae in my spine.
I had a few falls prior to this one over the years & almost always ended up with a fracture.
I don't think it will be helpful in building bone density.
I was advised to swim, & walk. I also have calcium tablets to take.
The advice not to fall off is good!. However, the only way to guarantee you won't fall off is not to get on.
I took the decision not to ride my horse again because I am scared of falling off him again & ending up in in a wheelchair. I kept my horse, he's semi-retired, he's really a pet now.
I love caring for him & my daughter's 2 ponies.
If you feel confident & have a good seat, go for it. If I had been younger when I had the last fall I think I would have carried on riding my boy.
I hope I'm not putting you off. I was never a very confident rider & my horse is a 17.3hh IDxTB. If I had gone down the more sensible route of buying a fat cob perhaps I'd still be riding now. I may yet buy one!
Perhaps you could find a good riding school & have some lessons on a schoolmaster & see how you feel.
Phew! That was a long post! Hope you're still awake, OP!
 
I have been diagnosed with osteopenia for the last 16 years and I am now 52. I also have a serious illness so try to be sensible and ride horses with nice temperaments that do not deliberately buck, rear, spook, bolt etc but because of weak muscles prefer to ride a horse that is responsive and is best ridden using my seat and very light hands. I have ridden cobs that their owners have said are push button only to turn into rodeo contenders in the school . I have also owned a TB who would do almost anything to keep me safe. If you ride you have to accept that a fall is always a possibility but the things i always use when I ride are a neck strap and body protector and if I am hacking a seat saver made of either sheepskin or suede.

If you are worried about getting on a certain horse then don't. Try to keep as safe as possible and this should apply to everyone.
 
Thank you both! Arlosmum, sorry to hear about your fall. That sounds awful and I hope you're fully recovered from it with no lasting effects. Myhorseeatsmoney, glad you are still able to ride - long may that continue for you!

I totally endorse the 'don't fall off' idea, especially as I would be a novice again - just with an older body, less bounce and more fear than when I was a child. :rolleyes:

My children ride at a school whose main focus is riding for the disabled, so their horses are lovely natured and bombproof. So a good school at which to attempt riding again, I would think. Plus I'm fairly sure I only want to bumble around in a low key kind of way, enjoying the countryside and the company of a horse, as I tried jumping as a child and it scared the bejeezus out of me!

I think I might pluck up the courage to try on one of their horses, even if it doesn't help build bone density it's going to strengthen (currently very unfit!) muscles.

I wish I knew more about horses, how to spot which would be a good fit for me temperament wise, but I'm clueless as in the long term I would love to get a family horse. But I'd need one that would work for me and my rickety hips, my 8 year old who is really starting to get into her riding, and my tall autistic non-verbal 5 year old who would spend all day on a horse if he could. I'm not sure such a horse exists, and I wouldn't know what to look for if it did! :)
 
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