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November 12, 2007
Calcium, vitamin D may reduce stress fracture
risk
By staff reporter
12/02/2007 - Daily supplements of calcium and vitamin D, long linked to improving
bone health, may also reduce the risk of stress fractures during exercise, scientists
have reported.
The results, presented yesterday at the 53rd annual Orthopaedic
Research Society meeting in San Diego, were obtained from a randomized, double-blind
study with
5,201 female U.S. Navy recruits during eight weeks of basic training.
“What really surprised us is that calcium/vitamin D supplements made a
significant difference in such a short period of time. Frankly, we were not sure
we would
see any statistically significant results in only eight weeks,” said lead
researcher Joan Lappe from Creighton University in Omaha.
The combination of vitamin
D and calcium has long been recommended to reduce the risk of bone fracture
for older people, particularly those at risk of or
suffering from osteoporosis, which is estimated to affect about 75m people
in Europe, USA and Japan.
The action of the nutrients is complimentary, with calcium
supporting bone formation
and repair, while vitamin D helps the body absorb calcium
The new study, funded
by the U.S. Department of Defense, appears to suggest that daily supplements
of the vitamin and mineral may also provide benefits for those
engaged in athletic training.
Stress factures are said to be one of the most common
and debilitating overuse injuries seen in U.S. military recruits with 21 per
cent of female recruits reported
to suffer from this form of injury. Male recruits suffer less. The research
of Professor Lappe, presented to attendees in San Diego, divided
the recruits into
two groups – one group received a daily supplement of 2,000 Mg of calcium
and 800 IU of vitamin D, and the other group received a placebo.
At the end of
the eight weeks of basic training, 170 women in the placebo group experienced
stress fractures; 25 per cent more women than in the calcium/vitamin
D supplemented group. NutraIngredients.com has not seen the full data. “It appears that supplementation with calcium and vitamin D provides a
health-promoting, easy and inexpensive intervention that does not interfere with
training goals,” said
Lappe.
Further studies are needed to confirm these findings, but the
results appear to fit with numerous other studies linking the
nutrients to improved bone health.
The
current EU recommended daily intake of calcium is 800mg, with an upper safe
limit of 2500mg. Vitamin D has a RDI of 400 IU, although campaigners
are calling
for an increase to 1000 IU, half the upper safe limit recommended by the EU
and US.
In the US, the DRI (dietary reference intake) for calcium is
1000mg for adults aged 19 to 50, and 1200mg from 51 to 70. For
vitamin D it is five micrograms
per day, rising to 10 after the age of 50. Source: www.nutraingredients.com
| Comment: This
study confirms what scientists at the Dr. Rath Research Institute
have shown in research and studies, that specific
nutrients in synergistic combinations produce greater health
benefits. It is a known fact that calcium along with vitamin
D is essential for bone health. However, our clinical study
and research has also shown that optimum bone health can
be achieved not with just one or two nutrients, but with
the combination of specific teams of nutrients including
vitamin C, vitamin D3, B-complex, amino acids (such as
lysine and proline), and minerals (including calcium and
magnesium) . We have developed and applied the nutrient
synergy approaches in various aspects of health, including
bone fractures. You can read more about Dr. Rath’s
research and clinical study in bone fractures at our web
site www.drrathresearch.org. |
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