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Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term effect of calcium supplementation on bone loss in perimenopausal women

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TLDR
It is concluded that calcium supplementation substantially reduces cortical and trabecular bone loss in the years immediately preceding menopause, and although it reduces postmenopausal cortical bone loss to some extent, it does not prevent theMenopause‐related lumbar bone loss.
Abstract
We observed in a controlled 2 year longitudinal trial in 248 perimenopausal women that a daily calcium supplement of either 1000 or 2000 mg Ca2+ significantly reduced lumbar bone loss and bone turnover in the first year of calcium supplementation. In the second supplementation year the rate of lumbar bone loss in the treated subjects was not significantly different from that in the control group, although two of the three biochemical parameters of bone turnover remained decreased throughout the study. To quantify further the long-term effect of calcium supplementation, we extended the study for another year in 214 women. In the women of the control group who were menstruating until the last year of the trial, the mean change in lumbar bone mineral density after 3 years was -3.2% of the initial value versus 1.6% in the calcium-supplemented groups (p < 0.01). The decrease in lumbar bone loss in these supplemented premenopausal and early perimenopausal women remained statistically significant in the second and third years of supplementation. In the women who stopped menstruating before or during the study, the long-term reduction in lumbar bone loss was not significant (mean difference between control and treatment groups < 0.6% points after 3 years). The decrease in metacarpal cortical thickness (MCT) in the treated subjects during 3 years was on average -3.0% of the initial value in the control versus -2.0% in the supplemented subjects (P < 0.01). The effect of calcium supplementation on MCT was not significantly related to the menopausal status of the subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Citations
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A controlled trial of the effect of calcium supplementation on bone density in postmenopausal women.

TL;DR: Healthy older postmenopausal women with a daily calcium intake of less than 400 mg can significantly reduce bone loss by increasing their calcium intake to 800 mg per day.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Estrogens and Calcium Carbonate on Bone Loss in Postmenopausal Women

TL;DR: It is concluded that postmenopausal sex-hormone replacement measurably decreases age-related bone loss by suppressing bone turnover, resorption more than accretion, and calcium supplements produce the same effect but at the dose the authors used were slightly less effective.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of calcium supplementation on bone loss in postmenopausal women

TL;DR: Calcium supplementation significantly slowed axial and appendicular bone loss in normal post-menopausal women and had a similar effect whether dietary calcium intake was above or below the mean value for the group.
Journal ArticleDOI

Postmenopausal bone loss is prevented by treatment with low-dosage estrogen with calcium.

TL;DR: Bone mass was measured prospectively in 73 women during the period immediately after menopause and after 2 years of follow-up to assess the protective effects of calcium supplements given alone or combined with low-dosage estrogen therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does calcium supplementation prevent postmenopausal bone loss? A double-blind, controlled clinical study.

TL;DR: The preliminary data suggest that calcium supplementation in the dosage used is not as effective as estrogen therapy for the prevention of early postmenopausal bone loss.
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