Plyometrics for Women with Osteopenia: What the Science Says

Plyometrics for Women with Osteopenia | APEX PWR Tigard Oregon

APEX PWR  |  Female Fitness  |  Bone Health

Plyometrics for Women with Osteopenia: What the Science Says

By the APEX PWR Team  |  Tigard, Oregon  |  Updated April 2026  |  APEX PWR Performance Wellness  •  Strength Training Trial

Osteopenia is one of the most frequently misunderstood diagnoses in women's health. A woman hears that her bone density is lower than it should be -- and her instinct is often to move less, protect more, and avoid anything that feels risky.

But here's what the evidence says: the opposite approach is usually right. Bone responds to load. Removing load accelerates bone loss. And for most women with osteopenia, a well-designed program that includes progressive impact training -- including plyometrics -- is one of the most effective tools available.

Bone responds to mechanical load by stimulating osteoblasts -- the cells responsible for building new bone. Remove the load, and the signal disappears.

What Is Osteopenia?

Osteopenia is a diagnosis of below-normal bone mineral density (BMD) that has not yet reached the threshold for osteoporosis. It's measured by a DEXA scan (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry) and reported as a T-score, which compares your BMD to that of a healthy young adult reference group.

Understanding Your DEXA T-Score
Normal bone density Above -1.0
Osteopenia -1.0 to -2.5
Osteoporosis Below -2.5

Bone density loss accelerates sharply during perimenopause and the years following menopause, as estrogen -- which plays a key protective role in bone remodeling -- declines. Women can lose 1–3% of bone density per year during this window. Without intervention, osteopenia progresses to osteoporosis.

At APEX PWR, we are the leading provider of DEXA scans in Oregon for both body composition and bone density. We see this pattern consistently in our scan data, and we build training programs around it every day.

Why Plyometrics? The Bone-Loading Principle

Bone is not static tissue. It is constantly being broken down by osteoclasts and rebuilt by osteoblasts. The balance between these two processes is what determines your net bone density over time.

What drives osteoblast activity -- the building side of the equation -- is mechanical load. Specifically, impact and compressive forces that create strain in bone tissue. This is why astronauts who experience zero gravity lose bone rapidly, and why sedentary individuals lose density faster than active ones.

Plyometric movements generate high-magnitude ground reaction forces in short time intervals. This type of stimulus -- high force, brief contact -- is particularly effective at stimulating bone adaptation at the sites most at risk in women: the lumbar spine and femoral neck (hip).

What the Research Shows

  • A systematic review in Osteoporosis International found that high-impact exercise, including jumping activities, significantly improved femoral neck bone density in premenopausal and postmenopausal women compared to low-impact controls
  • Research from the University of Missouri demonstrated that impact activities producing ground reaction forces greater than 4x bodyweight drove the most significant bone adaptation at the hip and spine
  • A 2022 meta-analysis in the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research confirmed that combined resistance and impact training produced greater BMD gains than either modality alone
  • Women who maintained plyometric and resistance training through perimenopause showed significantly slower rates of age-related bone loss compared to sedentary controls

Can Women with Osteopenia Safely Do Plyometrics?

For most women with osteopenia -- T-scores between -1.0 and -2.5 -- the answer is yes, with appropriate programming. The risk of fracture from progressive, supervised plyometric training in this population is low, and the risk of doing nothing is high.

Women with osteoporosis (T-score below -2.5) require more conservative initial programming, closer collaboration with their physician, and a longer introductory phase before advancing to full impact work. This is not a reason to avoid loading -- it's a reason to load carefully and progressively.

The question is not whether to load the skeleton. The question is how to load it safely, progressively, and with data guiding the decisions.

A Progressive Plyometric Framework for Women with Osteopenia

At APEX PWR, we don't take a one-size-fits-all approach. Every program starts with a DEXA scan to establish a baseline, and progressions are determined by the individual's T-score, fracture history, training history, and biomechanical competency. Here is a general framework we build from:

Phase 1: Foundation (Weeks 1–4)
  • Bodyweight strength: squats, lunges, step-ups, hip hinges
  • Low-level impact: marching, step-touch, low box step-downs
  • Focus on landing mechanics: soft knees, hip hinge on landing, controlled deceleration
  • No jumping until landing quality is established
Phase 2: Introduction to Impact (Weeks 5–10)
  • Two-foot bilateral jumps: small box jumps, squat jumps with controlled landing
  • Lateral bounds with controlled deceleration
  • Progressive load: resistance training advancing to moderate weights
  • Monitoring: soreness, joint response, and confidence levels tracked
Phase 3: Progressive Plyometric Loading (Weeks 11+)
  • Single-leg work: single-leg box step-downs, single-leg hops with stick landings
  • Direction changes: lateral shuffle bounds, multi-directional jump patterns
  • Higher box heights, increased volume
  • Heavy resistance training running concurrent: deadlifts, squats, hip thrusts

How DEXA Scans Guide the Entire Process

A DEXA scan before starting gives you a baseline. A follow-up scan 12–18 months into consistent training gives you data on whether it's working. This is not guesswork. This is the same data-driven approach we apply to body composition -- and it's why APEX invested in becoming the leading DEXA provider in Oregon.

Without a baseline, you're programming in the dark. With one, your coaches and physical therapists know exactly how conservative or aggressive to be, where the specific density deficits are, and how to track progress over time.

Start with Data. Train with Confidence.

Get a DEXA scan to establish your baseline, then work with our team to build a program around your actual numbers.

Strength Training Trial Physical Therapy Consult

Perimenopause, Menopause, and Bone Health

The 35–55 window is when bone loss accelerates most sharply in women. Estrogen's decline removes a key brake on osteoclast activity, and the rate of resorption outpaces formation. This is not inevitable -- but it does require intentional intervention.

At APEX, we work with women at every stage: returning to training after having children, navigating the hormonal shifts of perimenopause, managing body composition changes in menopause, and building the strength foundation that protects their bones into their 60s, 70s, and beyond.

Strength training and plyometrics are tools in that strategy. So is nutrition -- adequate protein and calcium intake are non-negotiable. So is vitamin D status. Our nutrition team integrates these pieces alongside the training program so nothing is left out.

APEX PWR in Tigard & Portland, Oregon

We are located at 11105 SW Greenburg Rd, Tigard, OR 97223, serving the greater Portland metro area including Lake Oswego, Beaverton, Tualatin, and Sherwood.

Our services relevant to women's bone health and fitness include:

  • DEXA Scans for bone density and body composition -- the most comprehensive DEXA program in Oregon
  • Strength Training Foundations Trial -- coached training with progressive programming
  • Physical Therapy -- injury evaluation and return-to-training protocols
  • Nutrition Coaching -- with APEX nutritionist Jennie Carolan
  • Sports Performance Training for youth athletes

apexpwr.com  •  Tigard, OR  •  Portland Metro Area

Sources: Nikander et al. (2010), "Targeted exercise against osteoporosis," Maturitas; Babatunde et al. (2012), "Effective exercise for the prevention of osteoporosis," Postgraduate Medical Journal; Benedetti et al. (2018), "Physical exercise and musculoskeletal health," Aging Clinical and Experimental Research; World Health Organization BMD classification criteria; ACSM Position Stand on Bone Health (2004). This article is for educational purposes. Consult your physician or physical therapist before beginning a new exercise program if you have a diagnosed bone density condition.

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