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Calcium supplementation: is protecting against osteoporosis counter to protecting against cardiovascular disease?

Current osteoporosis reports
June 1, 2014
Connie M Weaver
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effects of calcium supplementation on fracture risk reduction and its potential association with cardiovascular disease risk and mortality.

Results Summary

The study found mixed evidence regarding calcium supplementation's effectiveness in reducing fracture risk and conflicting reports on its link to increased or decreased cardiovascular disease risk. Poor compliance and study design flaws complicate the assessment of calcium supplementation's benefits for bone or heart health.

Population

General population, particularly those with inadequate dietary calcium intake.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
calcium supplements
decrease
osteoporosis
those consuming inadequate dietary calcium
-
standard strategy for prevention
#1
calcium supplementation
increase
cardiovascular disease risk
-
-
linked to increased
#2
calcium supplementation
decrease
cardiovascular disease risk
-
-
linked to decreased
#3
calcium supplements
decrease
fracture
-
-
shed uncertainty over the effectiveness to reduce risk
#4
calcium supplementation
decrease
fracture
-
-
effects to reduce risk
#5
calcium supplementation
increase
coronary heart disease
-
-
effects to increase
#6
calcium supplementation
increase
mortality
-
-
effects to increase
#7
Abstract

Calcium is the dominant mineral in bone and is a shortfall nutrient in the diet. For those consuming inadequate dietary calcium, calcium supplements have been a standard strategy for prevention of osteoporosis. Recently, calcium supplementation has been linked to both increased and decreased cardiovascular disease risk creating considerable uncertainty. Moreover, recent reports have shed uncertainty over the effectiveness of calcium supplements to reduce risk of fracture. The evidence for calcium supplementation effects to both reduce risk of fracture and increase coronary heart disease and mortality are reviewed. Although the importance of good calcium nutrition is well known, determining the advantage of calcium supplementation to either bone or heart health has been hampered by poor subject compliance and study design flaws. At present, the current Recommended Dietary Allowances for calcium still appear to be a good target with potential risks for chronic disease if intakes fall too short or greatly exceed these recommendations.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
CalciumCalcium, DietaryCardiovascular DiseasesDietary SupplementsHumansMyocardial InfarctionOsteoporosisOsteoporotic FracturesRisk FactorsVascular Calcification
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety60
Efficacy50/10
Quality70/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations25
Citations/Year2.3
Relative Citation Ratio1.01
NIH Percentile50.5%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.53
Normalized Score0.58
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