Bone Density Test Portland Oregon | Why the Right DEXA Scan Matters for Women | APEX PWR

Bone Density Test Portland Oregon | Why the Right DEXA Scan Matters for Women | APEX PWR

APEX PWR  |  Female Fitness

Bone Density Testing for Women in Portland, Oregon: What Your Bones Need That You Cannot Feel

By The APEX Team  |  Tigard, Oregon  |  Serving Portland, Tigard, Beaverton, Lake Oswego, Tualatin, West Linn & Hillsboro  |  June 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Roughly 80 percent of Americans with osteoporosis are women, and about one in two women over 50 will break a bone because of it. Most do not know their bones are thinning until a fracture happens.
  • Bone mass peaks around age 30. Measurable loss begins in the mid-30s and accelerates sharply through perimenopause, when women can lose bone at 1 to 3 percent per year, sometimes higher.
  • A DEXA body composition scan includes a total-body bone density number, but that number is a wellness trend metric, not a diagnostic. It is not what your physician uses to evaluate osteoporosis.
  • The test that evaluates osteoporosis is a site-specific DEXA bone density scan of the lumbar spine and hip, which produces the T-score and Z-score defined by the World Health Organization standard.
  • Bone loss is not fully reversible, but it is defensible. Strength training, adequate protein, calcium and vitamin D, and eating enough are the most evidence-supported tools. A baseline scan tells you where you stand.

Here is the uncomfortable part most women are never told: by the time a bone density problem announces itself, it usually does so as a broken bone. There is no ache, no early warning, no symptom you can feel. Bone loss is silent until it is not.

The numbers are stark. Around 80 percent of Americans with osteoporosis are women, and roughly one in two women over 50 will break a bone because of it, according to the Office on Women's Health and the Bone Health and Osteoporosis Foundation. Not from a fall off a ladder. From a stumble, a misstep on the stairs, sometimes from something as ordinary as lifting a grocery bag.

If you are a woman in your late 30s or 40s, juggling work and family with your own health somewhere near the bottom of the list, this article is the wake-up call. Not to scare you, but because this is the exact window where the decisions you make matter most, and where the right information changes the outcome. The clock on bone loss is already running. The good news is that you have far more control over it than almost anyone tells you.

It starts with a real bone density test in Portland, Oregon, the kind that gives you an actual number to work from. But the test is only the beginning. What you do next, specifically how you train and how you eat, is what bends the curve. And a lot of what women are told to do for their health, the crash diets and the cardio-only routines, makes bone loss worse. We will cover all of it.

Portland Tigard Beaverton Lake Oswego Tualatin West Linn Hillsboro

Why Bone Loss Starts Earlier Than You Think

Your bones are not static. They are living tissue in a constant cycle of breakdown and rebuilding. Specialized cells called osteoclasts break down old bone, and osteoblasts build new bone to replace it. For the first few decades of life, you build more than you lose.

That balance tips around age 30, when bone mass peaks. From the mid-30s onward, the scale starts to lean the other way: you begin losing slightly more than you rebuild. For a while the loss is slow. Then perimenopause arrives, and the floor drops.

The reason is estrogen. Estrogen is one of the body's primary signals telling bone to keep rebuilding. As estrogen declines through perimenopause and menopause, that signal weakens, and bone breakdown starts to outpace replacement. During this transition, women can lose bone at a rate of 1 to 3 percent per year, with some losing 5 percent or more in the years immediately surrounding their final menstrual period. Research published in the New England Journal of Medicine documented average annual bone density loss near 2 percent in the years after menopause. Compounded over five to seven years, that can mean losing a significant share of the bone you spent your whole life building.

Women start with less bone mass than men and lose it faster once estrogen drops. That is why the osteoporosis numbers are so skewed toward women, and why the years around perimenopause are the ones that count most.

This is the part worth sitting with. The steepest losses happen in a window that overlaps precisely with the busiest years of many women's lives. The 40s are when career and family tend to demand the most, and when personal health quietly slides to the back burner. It is also the last stretch where a proactive plan has maximum leverage, because the bone you protect now is bone you do not have to try to rebuild later.

The DEXA Confusion That Costs Women Real Answers

Here is where a lot of well-intentioned women get tripped up, and it is the single most important thing in this article.

The term "DEXA scan" gets used for two different tests. They use the same underlying technology, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, but they are run differently, report different things, and answer different questions. Confusing them is common, and it can leave a woman believing she has checked her bone health when she has not.

Scan Type 1

DEXA Body Composition Scan

Measures fat mass, lean muscle mass, and how each is distributed across your body. Excellent for tracking whether your training and nutrition are changing your body the way you want.

It also reports a total-body bone mineral density number as part of the full-body readout.

That total-body number is a wellness trend metric. It is not the diagnostic your physician uses to evaluate osteoporosis.

Book a Body Composition Scan
Scan Type 2

DEXA Bone Density Scan

Measures bone mineral density at specific high-risk sites: the lumbar spine and the hip. These regions contain more metabolically active bone and are where serious fractures happen.

It produces the site-specific T-score and Z-score defined by the World Health Organization standard for evaluating bone health.

This is the test that actually evaluates osteopenia and osteoporosis risk. This is what your doctor is looking for.

Book a Bone Density Scan
Good News

You do not have to choose. At APEX PWR in Tigard, you can do both the bone density scan and the body composition scan in the same appointment, for the complete picture of your bones and your body in one visit.

Why does the distinction matter so much? Because a whole-body bone density average blends every bone in your body together, including dense bones with thick outer layers that change slowly and can mask trouble. The spine and hip, by contrast, contain more of the active inner bone that responds first to aging and hormonal change, and they are the sites where a fracture is most likely to be life-altering. Site-specific measurement is the whole point.

To be clear, the body composition scan is a genuinely useful test. If your whole-body bone trend looks concerning, that is a real reason to go get the site-specific scan. But it is a prompt, not a substitute. If your question is "are my bones okay," the answer comes from the site-specific bone density scan of your spine and hip, not the total-body average on a body composition report.

Get the Scan That Actually Answers the Question

Site-specific DEXA bone density scanning of the spine and hip, in Tigard, central to the Portland metro. Know your real T-score and Z-score, not just a whole-body average.

Book a Bone Density Scan Or Explore Body Composition

The Myths That Keep Women From Acting

In the conversations we have with women at APEX, the same misconceptions come up again and again. Each one delays action during the years action matters most.

01

"Osteoporosis is something I worry about in my 60s."

The disease shows up in your 60s. The bone loss that causes it happens in your 30s, 40s, and 50s. By the time a diagnosis arrives, decades of trajectory are already set. Waiting until the standard screening age of 65 means missing the entire window where prevention works best. A baseline now is what lets you see the slope before you slide down it.

02

"I'm thin and active, so my bones must be fine."

Being lean is not the same as having strong bones, and it can work against you. Lower body weight is one of the most consistent risk factors for low bone density. You can have an enviable body fat percentage on a scale and still be losing the structural tissue that keeps you upright and unbroken. Thinness is not a proxy for bone health. Only a measurement tells you.

03

"Calcium and a daily walk are enough."

Calcium and vitamin D are necessary, and walking is good for you, but neither delivers the kind of mechanical load that signals bone to get denser. Walking is low-impact and largely maintains rather than builds. The stimulus that drives bone adaptation is heavier loading, the kind you get from resistance training. Nutrition supplies the raw materials; loading is the signal that tells the body to use them.

04

"I'm trying to lose weight, so I'm eating as little as possible."

Crash dieting actively works against your bones. Chronic under-eating, very low protein, and rapid weight loss all accelerate bone and muscle loss, because the body needs adequate energy and nutrients to maintain bone tissue. The same applies to fat-loss medications used without strength training and sufficient protein: you can lose weight fast and strip lean mass and bone right alongside the fat. Eating enough is not optional for bone health.

Bone Density Testing in Portland, Oregon Is Only the First Step

A scan tells you where you stand. It does not change where you are headed. The number on a bone density report is a starting line, not a finish line, and the most important part of this article is what comes after you get it. Because here is the hard truth: many of the things women are told to do to "get healthy" are quietly making their bones worse.

The standard playbook for a busy woman trying to lose weight reads like a list of everything that strips bone. Eat as little as possible. Skip the protein. Spend the limited workout time on the treadmill or in spin class. Stay out of the weights section because lifting heavy feels intimidating or like it is "not for me." Every item on that list accelerates the loss of the exact tissue you are trying to protect.

Endless cardio and crash dieting do not protect your bones. They speed up the loss. The way out is the opposite of what most weight-loss culture sells women: lift heavy, eat enough, and build strong.

Why Cardio Alone Will Not Save Your Bones

Cardio is good for your heart, your mood, and your endurance, and it has a place in any program. But it is not the stimulus that builds bone. Bone responds to load. When you put meaningful mechanical force through a bone, the body reads that signal and reinforces the structure underneath. Steady-state cardio, especially low-impact cardio like the elliptical or cycling, simply does not deliver that load.

Worse, a cardio-only approach paired with under-eating can actively degrade bone and muscle together. When you burn through energy without replacing it and without giving the body a reason to hold onto lean tissue, the body sheds what it considers expensive to maintain. Muscle and bone are both expensive. They go first.

The fix is not to abandon cardio. It is to stop treating it as the whole plan and to put resistance training at the center.

Lifting Heavy: The Single Best Thing for Your Bones

When you load a muscle, you load the bone underneath it. The body responds to that stress by reinforcing the bone, making it denser. This is one of the most reliable findings in the field, and it is the reason strength training sits at the center of any serious bone-health plan.

The clearest evidence comes from the LIFTMOR randomized controlled trial (Watson et al., 2018, Journal of Bone and Mineral Research). Researchers took postmenopausal women with low bone mass and put them through supervised high-intensity resistance and impact training, just twice a week, 30 minutes per session. The result: improvements in bone mineral density at the spine and hip, in a population that conventional advice often steers away from heavy lifting entirely out of fear of fracture. Under proper supervision, the training was both safe and effective.

Two honest caveats, because they matter. First, the LIFTMOR participants were postmenopausal women who already had low bone mass, so the trial speaks most directly to that group. For women in their 30s and 40s, the case for resistance training rests on a broader and equally strong body of evidence that loading builds and preserves bone, plus the simple logic that it is far easier to defend bone than to rebuild it. Second, "high intensity" here means properly coached, progressively loaded training, not grabbing the heaviest thing in the gym on day one. The supervision is what made it safe.

This is also where a lot of women have to push past something that has nothing to do with physiology: the idea that the weights section is not for them, or that lifting heavy will make them bulky. Neither is true. Building strength builds the body that carries you through the next forty years, and it is the work our coaches do every day.

"Breaking the skinny stigma is half the work, and once it clicks, everything changes."

Coach NicolePersonal & Group Strength Coach, APEX PWR

For a deeper look at how lower-body strength specifically connects to long-term health, see our companion piece on why leg strength predicts brain health.

Chase Strong, Not Skinny: The Nutrition Half of the Equation

You cannot build or defend bone on a starvation budget. Bone is living tissue that needs raw materials and energy to maintain itself. Chronic under-eating, very low protein, and rapid crash dieting all signal the body to break down rather than build, and bone pays part of that bill. Adequate calories, sufficient protein, and the supporting nutrients (calcium and vitamin D in particular) are not optional extras. They are the foundation.

This is the message our nutrition team works hardest to get across, because it runs directly against the diet culture most women have absorbed for decades.

"I want to help women chase strong, not skinny."

Jennie Carolan, MSNutrition Coach, APEX PWR

That single line reframes the whole project. The goal stops being the smallest possible number on a scale and becomes a body that is strong, well-fueled, and durable, with the bone and muscle to prove it. In practice that means eating enough to support your training, leading meals with protein, and treating food as the material your body builds with rather than something to minimize.

"As a mom, I do not have the time or the energy for a plan built on deprivation, and neither do the women I coach. We are not trying to eat less and less until there is nothing left. We are trying to eat enough of the right things to feel strong through a full day, protect our bones, and still keep up with our kids. Strong is sustainable. Skinny, the way most diets chase it, is not."

Jennie Carolan, MSNutrition Coach, APEX PWR

What a Smart Bone-Health Strategy Looks Like

Knowing the problem is not the same as having a plan. Here is the framework we use with women at APEX, built to fit a real schedule rather than an idealized one.

  • Measure first. Get a site-specific DEXA bone density baseline of your spine and hip. You cannot manage what you have not measured, and a baseline in your 30s or 40s is the reference point every future scan is judged against.
  • Train with load, not just cardio. Two to three resistance sessions per week, progressively loaded under coaching, is enough to start driving adaptation. Keep cardio for your heart, but make lifting the priority. Lower-body and full-body compound movements give you the most bone stimulus per session.
  • Eat to build, not to shrink. Adequate total calories and protein protect both muscle and bone. Pair that with sufficient calcium and vitamin D, which matters especially in the Pacific Northwest where sunlight is scarce half the year. Chase strong, not skinny.
  • Re-measure on a schedule. Bone changes slowly, so annual or biannual scans let you confirm your plan is working and adjust before a trend becomes a diagnosis.

None of this requires overhauling your life. It requires knowing your starting point and putting the few highest-leverage habits in place, consistently.

Three Ways to Start at APEX PWR

If you live in the Portland metro and want to act on this, there are three clear entry points. Start with whichever fits where you are right now. They work well together, but any one of them is a real step forward.

Book a DEXA Bone Density Scan

The site-specific spine and hip scan that gives you a real T-score and Z-score. This is the starting point for any serious bone-health plan, and it can be paired with a body composition scan in a single appointment if you want the full picture.

Book Bone Density Scan

Start a Strength Training Foundations Trial

Build the strength habit with expert coaching, in a group setting or one-on-one, no experience required. This is how you turn the science of loading bone into a routine that actually happens, with someone making sure your form and progression are safe.

Schedule Your Trial

Get a One-Time Macro Breakdown

A personalized nutrition plan built around your goals, with enough protein and energy to protect bone and muscle rather than strip them. The simplest way to make sure you are eating to build, not eating to lose ground.

Get Your Macro Breakdown

Serving Women Across Tigard, Beaverton & the Portland Metro

APEX PWR is located at 11105 SW Greenburg Rd in Tigard, central to the Westside Portland metro and an easy drive from across the region.

Women from Beaverton reach us in roughly 10 to 15 minutes via OR-217. Clients from Lake Oswego, Tualatin, and West Linn are typically within a 10- to 15-minute drive. For Portland residents in the Southwest, West Hills, and downtown areas, we are accessible along I-5 or Barbur Boulevard. Wherever you are in the metro, getting a real bone density baseline and a plan to act on it is closer than you think.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a DEXA body composition scan and a DEXA bone density scan?
They are two different tests for two different purposes. A body composition scan measures fat mass, lean mass, and distribution, and includes a total-body bone density number that works as a wellness trend metric. A bone density scan measures bone mineral density at specific sites, the lumbar spine and hip, and produces the site-specific T-score and Z-score used to evaluate osteopenia and osteoporosis. For bone health and fracture risk, the site-specific bone density scan is the one your physician is looking for.
Is the total body bone density number on a body composition scan enough to diagnose osteoporosis?
No. A whole-body bone density average is meant for tracking trends, not diagnosis. Osteoporosis is evaluated using site-specific bone mineral density at the spine and hip, because those regions contain more metabolically active bone and are the most common sites of serious fracture. A concerning whole-body trend is a reason to get the site-specific scan, not a replacement for it.
At what age should a woman get a bone density test?
Formal screening guidelines recommend routine testing at 65, or earlier with risk factors. But bone loss begins in the mid-30s and accelerates through perimenopause. Establishing a baseline in your 30s or 40s lets you catch a downward trend while you still have the most leverage to act. This is a decision to make with your physician, and a baseline scan gives you the data to have that conversation.
Can strength training improve bone density?
Yes. Mechanical loading stimulates bone to maintain and build density. The LIFTMOR randomized controlled trial found that supervised high-intensity resistance and impact training, twice weekly, improved bone density at the spine and hip in postmenopausal women with low bone mass. Resistance training is one of the most evidence-supported tools for defending bone, alongside adequate protein, calcium, and vitamin D.
Where can I get a bone density test in Portland, Tigard, or Beaverton?
APEX PWR offers DEXA bone density scanning at 11105 SW Greenburg Rd in Tigard, central to the Westside Portland metro and a short drive from Beaverton, Lake Oswego, and Tualatin. You can book a site-specific bone density scan on its own or pair it with a body composition scan and metabolic testing in a single appointment.
Does crash dieting affect bone density?
Yes, negatively. Chronic under-eating, very low protein, and rapid weight loss are associated with bone loss, because the body needs adequate energy and nutrients to maintain bone. Losing weight quickly without strength training and enough protein tends to strip lean mass and bone alongside fat. Building or preserving bone requires eating enough, training with load, and getting enough protein, calcium, and vitamin D.

Stop Guessing About Your Bones. Get the Number.

A site-specific DEXA bone density scan tells you exactly where you stand. Then we build the plan to protect it: strength, nutrition, and a re-test schedule that keeps you ahead of the curve.

Book Your Bone Density Scan Start Strength Training
Sources: Office on Women's Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Osteoporosis fact sheet (2026). Bone Health and Osteoporosis Foundation, What Women Need to Know. Watson SL, Weeks BK, Weis LJ, Harding AT, Horan SA, Beck BR (2018). High-Intensity Resistance and Impact Training Improves Bone Mineral Density and Physical Function in Postmenopausal Women With Osteopenia and Osteoporosis: The LIFTMOR Randomized Controlled Trial. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, 33(2), 211-220. PMID: 28975661. Ahlborg HG, et al. (2003). Bone Loss and Bone Size after Menopause. New England Journal of Medicine. Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine (2020). To scan or not to scan? DXA in postmenopausal women. World Health Organization diagnostic criteria for osteoporosis (lumbar spine and hip T-score). This article is educational and not a substitute for individualized medical advice; screening decisions should be made with your physician.

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