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Calcium Intake and Health.

Nutrients
January 1, 1970
Gabriela Cormick et al. (2 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the health benefits of appropriate calcium intake and address concerns about its safety and side effects.

Results Summary

The study found that calcium intake reduces hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, lowers blood pressure, prevents osteoporosis and colorectal adenomas, and improves cholesterol levels. It also refuted concerns about adverse effects like iron status damage, renal stones, and myocardial infarction.

Population

General population, including young people, pregnant women, post-partum women, and older adults.

Effective Dosage

An increase of around 400-500 mg/day suggested for population-level benefits.

Duration

Not specified.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (12)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Appropriate calcium intake
decrease
hypertensive disorders of pregnancy
-
-
reduction of
#1
Appropriate calcium intake
decrease
blood pressure
young people
-
lower
#2
Appropriate calcium intake
decrease
osteoporosis
-
-
prevention of
#3
Appropriate calcium intake
decrease
colorectal adenomas
-
-
prevention of
#4
Appropriate calcium intake
decrease
cholesterol values
-
-
lower
#5
sufficient calcium during pregnancy
decrease
blood pressure
progeny of mothers
-
lower
#6
calcium supplementation
no change
iron status
-
-
refuted side effects like damage to
#7
calcium supplementation
no change
formation of renal stones
-
-
refuted side effects like
#8
calcium supplementation
no change
myocardial infarction
older people
-
refuted side effects like
#9
calcium supplementation withdrawal
increase
bone resorption
post-partum women
-
Attention should be given to
#10
low calcium intake
increase
intracellular calcium in vascular smooth muscle cells
-
-
mediated by parathyroid hormone raise that increases
#11
increase of around 400-500 mg/day
decrease
differences in calcium intake between high- and middle-low-income countries
population level
400-500 mg/day
could reduce
#12
Abstract

There are striking inequities in calcium intake between rich and poor populations. Appropriate calcium intake has shown many health benefits, such as reduction of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, lower blood pressure particularly among young people, prevention of osteoporosis and colorectal adenomas, lower cholesterol values, and lower blood pressure in the progeny of mothers taking sufficient calcium during pregnancy. Studies have refuted some calcium supplementation side effects like damage to the iron status, formation of renal stones and myocardial infarction in older people. Attention should be given to bone resorption in post-partum women after calcium supplementation withdrawal. Mechanisms linking low calcium intake and blood pressure are mediated by parathyroid hormone raise that increases intracellular calcium in vascular smooth muscle cells leading to vasoconstriction. At the population level, an increase of around 400-500 mg/day could reduce the differences in calcium intake between high- and middle-low-income countries. The fortification of food and water seems a possible strategy to reach this goal.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdenomaAgingBlood PressureBone DensityCalcium, DietaryColorectal NeoplasmsHumans
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety85
Efficacy90/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations164
Citations/Year27.3
Relative Citation Ratio12.91
NIH Percentile98.6%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.02
Normalized Score0.86
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