|
Bone is living tissue and hormones have an effect on bone.
Estrogen causes bone resorption while progesterone and testosterone cause new
bone to be made. Bone is always being torn apart and put back together again,
just like your skin, hair, the lining of your intestines, and all the other
cells in your body except brain and muscle cells. They are all being
replaced, and bone replaces itself. The long bones in the legs and the arms
take 12 to 14 years for a total 100% replacement. The bones in your back-bone,
heel and the more open bones called trabecular bones, are completely replaced
every two to three years. So every two to three years every single molecule,
every single mineral, everything in your trabecular bones have all been changed
to new bone. Bone replacement is a continual process.
The ultimate strength and density of the bone is determined
by the balance be-tween these two effects: 1) the undoing and 2) the redoing.
If the undoing is happen-ing more rapidly than the redoing, the end result is
you will be losing bone. If the new bone formation catches up, you will stay
even, and if the new bone formation can be pushed higher than the undoing, then
you will have new bone again.
So what I stumbled on to is that progesterone causes new
bone formation. Many books have a graph that shows bone mass as a function of
time. A safe range for bone mass for your backbone is 0.9. If your measurement
is above 0.9 you will probably not have a fracture if you fall accidentally on
something soft. But if it is below 0.9 and you trip over a step or fall pretty
hard, you will probably break a bone. Therefore 0.9 is a kind of safe threshold
I use to compare bone densities.

The process starts when a girl is about age ten. Her
skeleton begins growing and showing more and more bone. Around age 35 she reaches her peak of bone mass. From age 35 on she starts
losing one to one and a half percent of her bone mass per year, so she could
lose 15% to 25% before menopause. At menopause it falls more rapidly, and then
returns to approximately the same rate of loss as before. This sounds wrong
because the popular consensus is that menopause precipitates
osteoporosis. Menopause is not the cause. Actually, it is
something that happens 10 to 15 years before menopause while women are still
making a lot of estrogen, having periods and losing bone. Bone loss is called
osteoporosis.
What happens at age 35 while there are still good estrogen
levels which cause the bones to start losing bone mass? Along comes a beautiful
report in the New England Journal of Medicine from a woman doctor in Vancouver
who was head of the Department of Endocrinology. She followed hormone levels,
first in women athletes, then in other women, and she found a high incidence of
anovulatory cycles. Anovulatory cycle means that the ovaries didnt make
the eggs that month, and if women dont make the eggs, they dont
make the progesterone. She found that at age 35 about 50% of the women in
North America start missing ovulation, even though their
periods continue to be regular. The woman doesnt produce eggs each month,
and therefore she is not making progesterone. She also found that while this
was taking place, the testosterone, cortisone, and estrogen levels stayed the
same. Everything stayed the same on the hormone levels except progesterone.
When progesterone went down or disappeared, thats when
osteoporosis started happening. The doctor proved that the decline of
progesterone is at least a cause of osteoporosis, even in the
face of plenty of estrogen.
This study proved that estrogen deficiency is not the cause
of osteoporosis. Doctors have been wrong for many years,
because they have been measuring the loss when estrogen fell at menopause, and
concluded that the bones were declining because estrogen levels fell. Bone loss
is not due to estrogen going down. Bone loss happens because you are not
ovulating and not making progesterone every month. You are becoming deficient
in progesterone. You are not keeping up with new bone forma-tion. This appears
to be new information, and yet charts showing bone decline starting at age 35
have been around for a long time.
Apoptosis means normal, programmed cell death. The only
reason you can stay healthy and young is because cells die on time, so new
cells coming along will have a place to work. The word means a falling
away. Its like the leaves of the trees in the fall in Vermont and
Maine. The trees look bare during the winter, but in the spring new leaves come
back. The one set of leaves did their work during the growing season, and the
next set of leaves will do their work during the next growing season.

Bone apoptosis happens when osteoclast cells come along and
eat up old bone thats been there for years and need to be taken away.
There are millions of these little osteoclast cells. When they get down to good
bone, they stop and leave. As soon as the osteoclasts leave, then another type
of cells called osteoblasts come in. Their purpose is to put in new bone. The
new bone they put in is stronger than the bone that was there before. This is
why your bone mineral density goes up. They can make better bone. Once the
osteoclasts take away the old bone the osteoblasts go in and build new bone.
(Sometimes these osteoblasts are called osteocytes.) Real, living osteoblasts
get embedded in the bone they are making. They stay alive, but not forever.
They die off all the time. When they die, the bone theyve made begins to
get more porous, weaker and more likely to break, and thats when the next
cycle begins.
Osteoclasts and osteoblasts are partners in the bone
building process. First, the osteoclasts take out the old bone that is weak,
then the osteoblasts move in to fill and make new bone. Bone mineral density
measurements represent an average of these two processes. It reminds me of our
bank account. When it gets too low my wife says, Put more money in.
And I say, It wouldnt get so low if we didnt take so much
money out. There are two processes going on. So when the doctor looks at
a bone mineral density report, what he sees is the average of the two
processes, but he doesnt know which one is predominant. If your bone
mineral density is falling, your doctor does not know whether youre
losing more bone than you ought to, or whether youre not able to make
enough new bone to catch up.
What I learned is that progesterone turns on the processes
which lead to new bone formation. Estrogen slightly
slows up the loss of old bone. Thats why at menopause, when estrogen
decreases, you have an increase of bone loss, called bone resorption. However,
within three or four years the body adjusts to the new estrogen level, and the
bone loss goes back to the bone resorption rate to what it was before
menopause, and then progesterone works again. During those three to five years
prior to the onset of menopause, progesterone might not be able to accumulate
enough new bone to catch up with the loss that is occurring, but after a few
years it will.

Now you know how bones are made. Youre always making
new bone, and youre always getting rid of old bone. The timing between a
period of quiescence and an increase, then another quiescence followed by new
bone being made again is a re-markable biological process. The time required to
renew all of the molecules, atoms, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus and
everything else in your long bones, such as the compact bones of your arm and
your femur, is about 12 to 15 years. Your backbone, called trabecular bone
where there are more open spaces and which do not have as much torsion
pressure; tturns over more rapidly. About every five years you will have 100%
new bone in your backbone, heel bones, and kneecaps. Isnt that amazing?
You are making yourself new every few years! So what you need is something to
help the osteoblasts. In men the helper is testosterone, and in women it is
progesterone.
Some doctors said my patients got well because there was
some kind of placebo effect or the force of my personality was such that people
got better, and it had noth-ing to do with progesterone. I told them, If
its a placebo effect, its an exceptional placebo effect, because
the tests prove that the bones actually got stronger. There is a little
acceleration of bone loss on these charts at age 50 to 55, which is around the
time of menopause, but then it straightens out on its own and continues the
same decline as was happening before menopause. So the big loss at menopause is
only a temporary time. Some women may need a little estrogen during this
period, but after they get past menopause all they need is progesterone, and
the bones come back. What I found after three years, is that untreated, a woman
will lose 1.5% to 2% of her bone mass a year. You might get a little surge of
estrogen, but then it remains level. When progesterone was added, the average
woman gained 15% new bone in three years. Such a thing was never before been
reported by anyone, so I wrote a paper about it, and it got published in an
international journal. I received letters from all over the world, but not one
letter from a doctor in the United States.

When I retired from practice nine years ago I asked my nurse
to pick out 100 records of women on progesterone. Out of the
100 I took only those who had at least three years of bone mineral density
tests every six months. I was left with 62 patients. The average increase in
bone density in these postmenopausal women over three years was 15.4% versus a
normal expected loss during that period of time of 4.5%. That is almost a 20%
average difference between what normally happens and what happens when women
are using progesterone. Estrogen only slows down bone loss for
the period of menopause, and after menopause it doesnt even do that.
Progesterone, however, causes new bone growth even in
postmenopausal women.
I then divided my patients up into two groups those
with a lot of bone loss and those with pretty good density. I found that the
worse the bone was at the beginning, the more it responded to
progesterone. The women with good bone at the beginning
essentially stayed the same. Doctors generally say that you cant help
women over 70, because they are 20 years post menopause, and the bones are
inactive. The bones are only inactive because they dont have the hormone
progesterone to telling them to get to work! In dividing the
results with those over 70 and those under 70 among my pa-tients, the gain was
essentially identical in both groups. So the bones do get to work again, and
age has nothing to do with it.
Examples from my practice of how
progesterone increased bone density
This first chart was in 1982. The lady was 72 years old and
had very poor bones. She had broken her forearm lifting her sick husband. She
went to her doctor who told her that she had such poor bones that she had to
take fluoride treatment. She told him that was a bad idea because she had taken
Dr. Lees class at College of Marin on Opti-mal Health, and he said
fluoride was a bad thing for bones. So he told her to go see Dr. Lee. I put her
on progesterone and she had a 24% improvement in bone density
over the next 30 months. Her bone density went from .669 to .865. Given her
height and weight this is a perfectly fine bone mineral density.

On the next lady I measured all four bones in her back with
Dr. Malcolm Powells dual photon bone mineral density test. All four of
these bones increased in density. The bone density actually increases in all
the bones throughout the body. It wasnt just that the bones that were
specifically low did any better than the others. Progesterone
had a positive effect on all the bones.
The next woman was from Pennsylvania. Her husband was a
Ph.D. in the medical sciences and her son was a doctor. She woke up one morning
with terrible back pain when she was 74 years old. They found she had advanced
osteoporosis. Remember that I said 0.9 was a good number for
bone density? Well, hers was .446. She had lost well over 50% of all the
minerals in her bones. She had been a health nut. She exer-cised. She ate
right. She took all the right supplements. She was doing everything right and
looked great, and her mind was as sharp as a tack. She didnt seem to be
aging at all, and yet her bones had lost all this bone mass. She had gone
through menopause at age 44, and here she was at age 74, 30 years later doing
everything right, and she still lost so much bone that she had a spontaneous
compression facture of her lumbar spine.
So she got another doctor who was an orthopedist and a
radiologist. She had five people in the medical profession on her case when she
called me. I had met her at an EPA meeting years before, and she had heard that
I was writing a paper about os-teoporosis. This was before I wrote my first
book about progesterone. I told her I would send her the
papers, but the treatment was in her case just to add some proges-terone, a
normal physiological dose, because I knew she was doing everything else right.
She was getting the calcium and the phosphorus, and she was eating right.
When she told her husband she was going to use
progesterone cream, he said that he had talked to a doctor who
was an expert on the subject and there is nothing in any of the books that say
progesterone would build bone. So she called me and asked if
this information was written in any books. She asked if I had any references
and things like that. I told her, No, if it was already written in books
I wouldnt have both-ered to write it up myself. I was writing the
book because I was reporting things I saw in real patients, but couldnt
find in any books.
The woman stuck with my thinking and told her husband she
was going to try progesterone cream despite his objection.
Finally her husband gave in saying, Then in six months were going
to make you get another bone mineral density test. In six months she went
from .446 up to .516. Thats over 14% in six months! Another test was done
ten months later and her bone density was still increasing.

Every year they send me these reports. One year she actually
went down a little bit, and on this report her husband had written in,
Her lower value at the 23rd month is possibly due to a nerve block given
to her. So I called her doctor and asked what he was giving her. He said,
Well, I felt a little out of the loop, and I wanted to do
some-thing. So he gave her two or three injections of methylprednisolone,
which is cortisone. Cortisone blocks
progesterone from its receptors in bone cells. Thats why
all people on cortisone are at high risk for osteoporosis. It
blocks progesterone from doing its work. Cortisones
message to the cells is, Stop whatever youre doing. If you
have poison oak, your doctor can give you cortisone, and it will stop the
poison oak. If you have inflammation in your joints like rheumatoid arthritis,
he can inject cortisone, and it will stop the inflammation. Cortisone stops the
cell from doing what its doing because of inflammation. In the case of
bone cells, it stops them from making new bone. This was the reason the
womans bone density measurement went down in the 23rd month.
When I explained this to her husband, they stopped the
injections and the bone density increased again. After four years she had
gained 37.9% new bone. There is no other treatment anywhere that comes close to
this. In her case it was the only thing she needed. Her doctor told her that
she would have to take estrogen. She replied, Oh no, my sister took
estrogen, and she died of breast cancer. You have to be stubborn, and
this lady was stubborn. Her husband told her it couldnt work. Her son
told her it couldnt work. Her doctor told her it couldnt work. Her
orthopedist told her it couldnt work. Her radiologist told her it
couldnt work. Now, one by one Ive gotten letters from all these
doctors her radiologist, her orthopedist, her doctor, and her husband
all basically saying, If we hadnt seen it with our own eyes,
we would never have believed what you wrote in your book. I still
havent heard from the son, but he is using proges-terone in his practice,
so we got them all changed in their thinking. And this is how it is going to
happen one by one, people are going to see that
progesterone works.

In a couple of my patients progesterone was
not working. One lady was taking too much thyroid hormone which accelerates
bone loss, and when we got that straight-ened out her bone density improved.
Another lady was 75. She didnt make hydrochlo-ric acid. If you dont
make hydrochloric acid you cant absorb calcium. It took great brains to
discover that. You have to be very, very clever. She came in and said, I
dont think Im absorbing the calcium. So I asked her why she
thought that and she said, Well, I can see the little calcium pills in my
bowel movements. So, clever as I was, I said, I think youre
not absorbing the calcium! The reason is that you dont have enough
hydrochloric acid. She disagreed and told me that the Ross Valley Clinic
was giving her a medicine to suppress her acid because shed had
indigestion for years so she probably had too much acid. They gave her Tums,
but that didnt help. Then they gave her Tagamet. Tagamet stops the
stomach from making acid, but that didnt help her indigestion. I told her
that she had indigestion because she didnt have the acid necessary to
digest her food so the undigested food goes into the intestine where the
bacteria that live there digest it, ferment it, and make all these things that
cause gas and indigestion. I suggested that she try some hydrochloric acid. She
was afraid of getting an ulcer, but I persuaded her to try some betaine
hydrochloride from the health food store. Not only did her indigestion go away,
but her bones immediately began to get stronger as well.
The doctor was treating a symptom. It didnt work, and
he wasnt even curious enough to figure out why it didnt work.
Approximately 50% of people over 70 dont make enough acid to absorb
calcium. A large number of older people take antacids on a regular basis.
Maalox, Mylanta, and all of the H 2 blockers stop the stomach from making its
normal acid. And now these H 2 blockers such as Pepsid AC and Tagamet, are
being sold over the counter. They knock out 85% to 90% of the stomachs
acid production. These people will not be able to absorb nutrients like
calcium. Antacids increase the
osteoporosis problem and may be related to eventual deep bone
deficiency and pernicious anemia. Gastric cancer could also be related. Mother
Nature makes these stomach acids for a reason. Antacids stop the absorption of
calcium, no matter how it is given.

Winston Churchill once said, Every once in a while it
happens that people stumble over the truth. But most of the time they pick
themselves up and go on as if nothing happened. Thats what I
dont want to do. I dont want to go on as if nothing hap-pened.
Something happened to me. I fell into this, and I saw all these good things
that were happening.
- Anovulatory cycle means that the ovaries
didnt make the eggs that month, and if women dont make eggs, they
dont make progesterone.
- Apoptosis means normal, programmed cell death. The
only reason you can stay healthy and young is because the cells die on time, so
the new cells coming along will have a place to work. The word means a
falling away.
- National Osteoporosis Foundation: A bogus
organization at best, funded by the manufacturers of Premarin and Tums. They
are a group of retired professors who go around the country charging $300,
$400, $500 for people to come and hear their talk. They know that I say that a
little progesterone is very important. So when they were asked about Dr. Lee, a
member from the National Osteoporosis Foundation in Bos-ton said, Oh, we
know Dr. Lee. Hes Chinese, and he owns all the progesterone
com-panies. Ive got the right surname for being Chinese, but my
grandparents all came from Norway and Sweden, and I dont own a share in
any company that makes progesterone cream. I dont own anything in any
company that makes a progester-one cream. So when they were in New York they
were asked, What about Dr. Lees ideas about progesterone? And
they replied, Oh, we know Dr. Lee. We offered him as many millions as he
needed to do a double blind study, but he refused. Ive been retired
from private practice for nine years, so maybe I missed it in the mail, but I
havent seen it.
There are things in life that do not need a
double blind, placebo-controlled study. We have a pasture on our farm, and we
pasture horses for people. There is one horse that likes to kick at you when
you walk behind her. You dont need a double blind study to avoid getting
kicked. You avoid the horse, and thats all you need to do. If someone
says all sheep are white, all you have to do is bring in a couple black sheep.
You dont have to do a double blind study. Its the same thing with
natural progester-one cream. If they say that after age 65 osteoporosis cannot
be reversed, and you reverse it in 62 women using just progesterone, you
dont need a double blind study! Im not against someone doing a
double blind study, but they know that no one will pay for it. Progesterone is
a real hormone and since its not a patentable synthetic, there is no
money to be made so no one is going to ante up the $500,000 to $1,000,000 to do
a study.
 |