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Getting Enough Calcium and Vitamin D

November 21, 2011

Getting Enough Calcium and Vitamin D? Sunday, November 20th, 2011 For bone health, vitamin D and calcium go hand in hand, because the vitamin must be present for calcium to be absorbed from the dige




FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Free-Press-Release.com) November 21, 2011 -- Getting Enough Calcium and Vitamin D?

Sunday, November 20th, 2011

For bone health, vitamin D and calcium go hand in hand, because the vitamin
must be present for calcium to be absorbed from the digestive tract. But who, if
anyone, needs supplements — and how much? Can you get enough from foods
naturally rich in these nutrients or fortified with them?



These are important questions, given the steady increase in life expectancy
and the already epidemic levels of osteoporosis

and fractures among older Americans, men and women alike. (Women are especially
vulnerable, because estrogen
loss at menopause
can cause a precipitous decline in bone density.)



The answers depend on three things, not to mention which experts you happen
to ask: the foods and drinks you regularly consume, your personal and family
history of broken bones, and habits that influence bone health.



Dr. Robert P. Heaney, a bone specialist at Creighton University in Omaha,
maintains that “at least one-third of all osteoporotic fractures have a
nutritional basis.”



What you eat and drink, from childhood on, is critical to the amount of
calcium in your bones. Dairy foods, especially milk, yogurt and cheese, are the
primary sources of calcium in the American diet, and consumption of milk has
been falling steadily for decades, especially in adolescence,
when most bone development occurs. A British study
concluded that frequent milk consumption before age 25 was an important
determinant of bone strength among middle-aged and elderly women.



Other foods are not nearly as rich in absorbable calcium, or the amounts

normally eaten do not come close to the calcium content of dairy products: 300
milligrams in a glass of milk, 400 milligrams in eight ounces of yogurt.



Sardines and canned salmon eaten with the bones are good sources, and almonds
are a fair source if you eat enough of them. And calcium-fortified foods like
orange juice, soy milk, breakfast cereals and tofu are now widely available.



Too Much of a Good Thing



But some other desirable foods are problematic, at least when it comes to
calcium: you’d have to eat so much broccoli to approach the level in milk that

it could be toxic to your thyroid gland. Other vegetables with calcium, like
spinach, collards, kale and beans, contain oxalates that block calcium
absorption.



For daily calcium intake, the institute now recommends 1,000 milligrams for
children 4 to 8, women and men 19 to 50, and men 51 to 70; 1,300 milligrams for
children 9 to 18; and 1,200 milligrams for women 51 and older and men 71 and
older. The upper limit of safety, the institute said, is 2,000 milligrams a day
for men and women over 51.



Thus, if you are a postmenopausal woman who typically consumes only one or

two servings a day of dairy, you may be hard put to get 1,200 milligrams of
calcium from the rest of your diet unless you take a supplement. Dr. Ethel
Siris, director of the osteoporosis clinic at Columbia
University Medical Center in New York, said such women could benefit from a
supplement of calcium carbonate (600 milligrams a day) or calcium citrate (500
milligrams a day).



Be sure to read the product label carefully — a usual “serving” is two
tablets. Calcium carbonate should be taken with meals to assure absorption, but

calcium citrate can be taken at any time and may cause fewer digestive problems.



Most calcium supplements now also contain vitamin D (usually as
cholecalciferol, or D3), supplying about 250 to 300 international units in two
tablets. The Institute of Medicine recommends 600 units a day for everyone from
age 1 to 70 and 800 units for men and women 71 and older, with a safe upper
limit for everyone over the age of 9 of 4,000 units.



Vitamin D has one advantage over calcium: It is fat-soluble and can be stored
in the body for later use. But getting enough of it can be tricky.



The body gets most of its vitamin D not from diet but from skin exposed to
the ultraviolet B radiation in sunlight. Unprotected skin on the arms and legs
may need about 15 minutes of sun exposure a day in spring, summer and fall to
make enough of the vitamin.



Alas, this production is effectively blocked if you follow current advice to
prevent skin
cancer and wrinkles
by always covering up or using ample amounts of sunscreen. Used properly,
sunscreens with an SPF of 8 or higher completely block UVB radiation and prevent
synthesis of vitamin D.



Also, people who are dark-skinned or housebound or who live in far northern
latitudes may fail to make enough vitamin D. And as people age, their bodies are
less able to convert the vitamin into the hormone that is its biologically
active form.



Milk is fortified with vitamin D at a level of 400 units per quart, and some
yogurts have it as well (check the label). Many breakfast cereals are also now
fortified. The only naturally rich dietary sources are oily fish from the sea
like salmon and mackerel, egg yolks, liver and fish liver oil.



Testing and Maintaining



An increasing number of physicians now routinely test vitamin D levels in the
blood of their female patients, and if it is below 30 nanograms per milliliter,
will suggest they take a supplement. The Institute of Medicine maintains that a
level of 20 nanograms is adequate, but other experts say it should be higher to
assure maximum calcium absorption and bone health.



In any event, unless you are a year-round sun worshiper, a daily supplement
of calcium with D, or even a separate supplement of 1,000 units of D, is likely
to keep you well below the institute’s upper safe limit. Based on current

evidence, unless you have a severe deficiency requiring temporary megadoses to
correct, there is no reason to go any higher.



At the same time, you’d be wise to get sufficient weight-bearing exercise and
avoid several bone-robbing habits: smoking; eating a lot of salty foods;
drinking more than two alcoholic drinks a day; consuming more than the caffeine
equivalent of two cups of coffee a day (about 300 milligrams); and eating too
little protein. As for soft drinks, Dr. Siris advises a daily limit of two
12-ounce cans, and she’d prefer that soda be only an occasional treat.


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  • Name: Nicholas Cappello MD

    Email: ***@hotmail.com


  • About the author

    Dr.Nicholas Cappello. was born on March 12, 1948 in Brooklyn New York as the 2 child to Freda a dress maker and Joesph, who worked as Pepsi Cola salesman. For nearly the entire first 12 years of his life, he and his parents, his maternal grandparents, a



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