Bone is not static. It remodels continuously — old bone is broken down and new bone is laid down in response to the mechanical demands placed on it. Understanding this process explains why strength training works for bone density, and why the specifics of how you train matter.
The Mechanostat
Bone tissue contains mechanosensory cells called osteocytes — they detect mechanical strain and signal the remodeling process accordingly. When strain on bone tissue exceeds a certain threshold, osteoblasts (bone-forming cells) are activated to lay down new tissue. When strain is chronically below threshold — as in prolonged bed rest or weightlessness — osteoclasts (bone-resorbing cells) dominate and bone mass decreases.
The body maintains bone at the minimum mass needed to handle the loads it regularly encounters. Apply greater loads than it currently handles, and it adapts upward. Apply less, and it adapts downward.
Why Load Magnitude Matters
The osteogenic response is proportional to the strain magnitude and its novelty. Light resistance — bands, very low weights, anything that doesn’t challenge the tissue — doesn’t produce enough strain to trigger meaningful adaptation. The load needs to be high enough to deform bone tissue beyond what it regularly experiences.
This is why research on bone outcomes from resistance training consistently shows better results at higher intensities (70 to 85 percent of maximum) compared to high-repetition, low-load training. More reps at a low weight doesn’t substitute for genuine loading.
Site Specificity
Bone adaptation is local. Loading the spine builds bone at the spine. Loading the hip builds bone at the hip. This is why exercise selection matters for bone outcomes — squats, deadlifts, and hip hinges load the lumbar spine and proximal femur directly, which are the highest-priority sites for fracture prevention after menopause.
Upper body pressing and pulling movements load the humerus and forearm — also common fracture sites. A well-designed program for bone density trains the full body, not just the legs.
The Timeline
Bone remodeling is slower than muscle adaptation. Meaningful changes in bone mineral density take 6 to 12 months of consistent training to show up on a DEXA scan. This is not a reason to doubt the process — it’s a reason to maintain consistency and resist the temptation to conclude it isn’t working after a few months.
The structural and functional changes — reduced fracture risk, improved balance, greater confidence in movement — begin before the scan shows changes in density numbers.
→ Bone Loss After Menopause: What’s Happening and What Reverses It
→ The Best Exercises for Bone Density After Menopause
– Stephen Holt, CSCS
29 Again Custom Fitness | Timonium, MD
Nerd Note: Bone adapts to mechanical loading through osteocyte mechanosensing and downstream osteoblast activation. High-load resistance training at 70–85% of maximum produces greater osteogenic stimulus than low-load training. Adaptation is site-specific and requires 6–12 months for DEXA-measurable changes. Robling AG et al., Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering (2006); Turner CH & Robling AG, Exercise and Sport Sciences Reviews (2003); Kemmler W et al., Osteoporosis International (2020).
