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Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium supplements: practical considerations.

Robert P. Heaney
- 01 Feb 1991 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 2, pp 65-71
TLDR
It is desirable to assess absorption fraction before beginning a supplement regimen, because typical patients exhibit a wide range of absorption efficiencies, and some patients will need three times as large a dose as others to absorb the same amount of calcium.
Abstract
The preferable source of calcium is a balanced diet, but medicinal supplements are sometimes necessary if patients are to reach desired intakes. A divided dose regimen (4x/d; i.e., with meals and at bedtime) results in substantially greater absorption of a supplement than does 1x/d dosing. However, differences in chemical solubility between supplement preparations are of little importance, with calcium carbonate preparations, for example, being absorbed as well or better than some much more highly soluble salts. Gastric acid is not necessary for absorption of even poorly soluble preparations, so long as they are taken with meals. Because typical patients exhibit a wide range of absorption efficiencies, it is desirable to assess absorption fraction before beginning a supplement regimen. (Some patients will need three times as large a dose as others to absorb the same amount of calcium.) Calcium intakes up to at least 62.5 mmol (2500 mg) are safe for virtually all patients.

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Citations
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Effect of potassium citrate on bone density, microarchitecture, and fracture risk in healthy older adults without osteoporosis: a randomized controlled trial.

TL;DR: Among a group of healthy elderly persons without osteoporosis, treatment with K-citrate for 24 months resulted in a significant increase in aBMD and volumetric BMD at several sites tested, while also improving bone microarchitecture.
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Scientific opinion on Dietary Reference Values for calcium.

TL;DR: Following a request from the European Commission, the Panel on Dietetic Products, Nutrition and Allergies derived Dietary Reference Values for calcium, including Average Requirement (AR), Population Reference Intake (PRI) and Adequate Intake (AI).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dietary supplementation in elderly patients with fractured neck of the femur.

TL;DR: The clinical outcome of elderly patients with femoral neck fracture can be improved by once daily dietary oral supplementation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium absorption and achlorhydria

TL;DR: Comparison of absorption of calcium in its carbonate form with that in a pH-adjusted citrate form in patients with achlorhydria and normal subjects found that absorption from citrate in those with a chlorhydria was significantly higher than in the normal subjects, as well as higher than absorption from carbonate in either group.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium nutrition and bone health in the elderly.

TL;DR: Calcium nutrition is considerably more important in the genesis of osteoporosis than has been commonly thought for the past 35 yr, and the RDA for adults should surely not be lowered below its current level (800 mg), but that it ought to be raised.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium absorption in women: relationships to calcium intake, estrogen status, and age.

TL;DR: A total of 526 absorption studies, using both the double‐isotope and balance‐based methods, were performed in 189 middle‐aged women in good general health, extending over 17 years of observation.
Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of the importance of gastric acid secretion in the absorption of dietary calcium.

TL;DR: It is concluded that gastric acid secretion and Gastric acidity do not normally play a role in the absorption of dietary calcium.
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