Posted on 02/15/2006 6:52:24 PM PST by Pharmboy
The biggest study ever of calcium and vitamin D supplements for older women showed they offered only limited protection against broken bones, raising questions over what has been an article of faith among doctors and nutritionists.
The supplements seemed to reduce the risk of broken hips in women over 60 and also helped those who took the supplements most regularly. But as to preventing bone fractures overall, vitamin D and calcium flunked in these healthy women.
One of the researchers, Dr. Norman Lasser at New Jersey Medical School, said the study is "not as ringing an endorsement of calcium as one might like."
Even so, many experts said they would stand behind federal guidelines recommending the supplements, if needed, to meet standard intake of calcium and vitamin D.
"There's probably a small benefit," said Dr. Joel Finkelstein, of Massachusetts General Hospital, who wrote an editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine where the study appeared Thursday. "It's a good start, but women at higher risk need to know it's not enough."
The findings were an offshoot of the big national study of diet and hormone therapy known as the Women's Health Initiative.
Osteoporosis touches an estimated 10 million Americans, making their bones prone to break. One of two women will suffer such a fracture in her lifetime.
For women over age 50, federal guidelines recommend 1,200 milligrams of bone-building calcium and 400-600 international units of vitamin D daily from diet and, if needed, supplements.
The seven-year study of 36,282 women ages 50 to 79 gave half the participants 1,000 milligrams of calcium and 400 units of vitamin D, while the other half took dummy pills.
However, many were also taking their own supplements before the research began, and they were allowed to keep doing so, whether they were assigned to the test group or the comparison group. These extra supplements may have helped the women stay healthy but ironically diluted the findings, since any benefit is harder to show against a backdrop of fewer fractures. Also, women in the study were taking hormone pills, likely further cutting the number of fractures.
The study showed better hip bone density in the group given supplements, but they ranked no better statistically in avoiding fractures of all kinds. However, women over age 60 reduced their chances of hip fracture by 21 percent with the supplements.
Many women sometimes missed their daily dose a common phenomenon in real-world testing but those who took their supplements most faithfully lowered their risk by 29 percent.
"We still do believe ... that maintaining an adequate calcium intake will lay the foundation for bone health," said lead author Dr. Rebecca Jackson at Ohio State University.
Dr. Bess Dawson-Hughes, a Tufts University vitamin expert who helped shape the dietary guidelines, said they should remain unchanged for now. She largely dismissed the overall negative finding.
"You put people who don't need it together with people who aren't taking it, and you find nothing and that really isn't all that surprising," she said.
Some researchers said the effect would have been clearer with higher doses of vitamin D, perhaps up to 1,000 units daily. The vitamin helps the body absorb calcium and promotes muscle health, reducing falls.
"We don't want to send the message to people to throw away their calcium pills, which was my wife's first reaction," said Lasser, one of the study authors.
The study did show a significant side effect with the diet supplements: a 17 percent increase in the risk of kidney stones. But several doctors downplayed that risk, saying hip fractures are typically much worse than kidney stones.
Doctors said the study suggests that women at higher risk of fracture whose tests show lost bone density likely need more than diet supplements. They may require osteoporosis drugs.
The study also checked whether the supplements might help prevent colon cancer, and the results indicated there was no benefit. That wasn't a big surprise partly because past studies had not signaled much benefit.
Still, the researchers plan to check participants in future years, because colorectal cancer can take 10 to 20 years to develop.
___
On the Net:
New England Journal of Medicine: http://nejm.org
federal dietary guidelines:
http://www.health.gov/dietaryguidelines/dga2005/document/html/chapter2.htm
Osteoporosis facts:
http://www.osteo.org/newfile.asp?docfast&doctitleFast+Facts+on+Osteoporosi
&doctypeHTML
Gotta lift weights. Increasing muscle strengthens bone. Ok, so I'm a personal trainer and I'm trying to drum up business....but it's true! ;o)
That's EXACTLY what I meant in post 1...perhaps I wasn't clear enough. Keep up the good work, friend!
Years ago, we were told that load-bearing exercisessuch as weight training, walking, and joggingwould build bones and prevent osteoporosis. Is that still the conventional wisdom?
I got a Personal trainer in December, I weighed 218 then. Now I weigh 230 (I am 5'-11 1/2")
I once read a study that suggested that calcium supplements cause your blood calcium to rise, and so your body says "uh-oh too much calcium!", and then proceeds to remove it... mainly by removing it from your bones, thus having the exact opposite effect that you wanted.
Not sure what you're saying with your post. Do you mean you've put on 12 lbs. of muscle? Has your body fat % gone down?
I hope it's muscle. My body fat % was up there. People say I don't look like I weigh that much
You don't have to play football to break a bone. Getting off the couch and walking to the fridge could do it if your bones are brittle. (so, keep a small fridge near the couch.) ;o)
She had me doing a lot of core trainning. I had her for 12 sessions. She didn't do any follow up measurements.
I think I've got too much calcium.
My mother never had a cavity until she was pregnant with me; her first trimester, she got four.
I got my first calcium kidney stone at 12 and have suffered through four since that one. YOW.
A prior doctor told me not to take multivitamins, unless I could find one without calcium in it, which is almost impossible.
She didn't!? Tsk, tsk.
Drink milk and consider taking Fosamax once a week if your doctor recommends it.
...or Boniva once a month...or Zometa IV once/year when that gets FDA approval.
I'm not giving up my calcium. I went on a high-protein/no dairy diet. As soon as I put dairy back in my lower back pain went away and I started losing weight. Yeah, I've got the stuffy nose in the morning, but I was in agony without the calcium intake.
Bump for later read
i was checked and had osteoporosis at age 43. a couple of years of Fosamax increased my bone density, and i haven't taken it since.
bone density last year was okay, but i've been thinking i'd like to take fosamax again for prevention and to try to build some more bone. I have read you need magnesium for calcium absorption, hard to find.
Nah...calcium absorption from the gut is closely controlled and it is VERY difficult to poison yourself with too much dietary calcium.
I don't doubt what you are saying, but there is no data to support rapid results in pain as you describe.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.