Vitamin D and Calcium interplay explored
Newswise — Increasing calcium intake is a
common--yet not always successful--strategy
for reducing bone fractures. But a study
supported in part by the Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) underscores the
importance of vitamin D and its ability to
help the body utilize calcium. The study
also may explain why increasing calcium
alone isn’t always successful in dealing
with this problem.
Currently, calcium intake recommendations
are not tied to vitamin D status, which may
explain why markedly different recommended
calcium intakes exist among countries. In
the United States, the recommended calcium
intake is 1,200 milligrams (mg) daily for
adults aged 50 and older.
The body's skeleton needs adequate dietary
calcium to reach its full potential in terms
of bone mass. Still, many other factors
affect bone mass, such as exercise, smoking
and vitamin D--the latter through its effect
on calcium absorption and direct effect on
the skeleton.
The study involved a close look at about
10,000 men and women aged 20 and older
participating in a nationally representative
survey. Coauthors included nutrition
specialist Bess Dawson Hughes with the Jean
Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center
on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts University in
Boston, Mass. Dawson Hughes is director of
the HNRCA Bone Laboratory.
Blood levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D are used
as the primary indicator of vitamin D
adequacy. Within the study sample of U.S.
adults, a large fraction of younger and
older adults were below a suggested
desirable serum vitamin D concentration of
at least 75 nanomoles-per-liter (nmol/L).
The study supports the idea that correcting
inadequate blood levels of vitamin D is more
important than increasing dietary calcium
intake beyond 566 mg a day among women and
626 mg a day among men for better bone
mineral density. For example, a higher
calcium intake beyond 566 mg a day may only
be important among women whose vitamin D
concentrations are low (less than 50 nmol/L),
according to authors.
Details of this study can be found in the
publication Journal of Bone and Mineral
Research.
ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
(USDA) principal intramural scientific
research agency. The research supports the
USDA priority of improving nutrition and
health.
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