Literature DB >> 1138021

Calcium absorption as a function of calcium intake.

R P Heaney, P D Saville, R R Recker.   

Abstract

The relationships between the amount of calcium absorbed and the quantity ingested was evaluated in 180 adult humans. Absorption was measured from the concentration ratio of concurrently administered oral and intravenous calcium isotopes. Intake ranged from 0.163 to 7.48 Gm. Ca per day. In 14 subjects, intakes were artificially elevated for purposes of this study. All others were studied at their usual intake levels. Absorption (Ca Abs) was found to follow a curvillnear relationship with intake (Ca-D), and was characterized by the following equation: Ca Abs equals 0.1541 - Ca-D plus 0.3127[exp(-1.0539 - Ca-D)] - Ca-D. The exponential term of this equation provided the major component of total absorption at intakes below 0.8 Gm. per day, but fell to negligible values when intake reached 2 to 3 Gm. per day, above which absorption was characterized by a simple linear function of intake. We found that there was no detectable upper limit to absorption capacity, which, at the 7.48 Gm. intake level, averaged more than 1.0 Gm per day. The observed mathematical description is consistent with the generally recognized inverse relationship between absorption efficiency and intake. At the same time it indicates that a component of absorption is independent of control mechanisms and is related solely to intake. A more general form of the foregoing equation, suggesting provision for other physiological variables such as growth hormone and cortisol, is proposed and discussed.

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Year:  1975        PMID: 1138021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Lab Clin Med        ISSN: 0022-2143


  18 in total

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3.  Habitual dietary calcium intake and cortical bone loss in perimenopausal women: a longitudinal study.

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4.  Impact of calcium intake and intestinal calcium absorption on kidney stones in older women: the study of osteoporotic fractures.

Authors:  Mathew D Sorensen; Brian H Eisner; Katie L Stone; Arnold J Kahn; Li-Yung Lui; Natalia Sadetsky; Marshall L Stoller
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5.  Measurement of 47calcium retention with a whole-body counter.

Authors:  C C Shipp; C J Maletskos; B Dawson-Hughes
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6.  Caffeine and the calcium economy revisited.

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7.  Jejunal and ileal adaptation to alterations in dietary calcium: changes in calcium and magnesium absorption and pathogenetic role of parathyroid hormone and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D.

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8.  Revisable criteria for vertebral deformity.

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9.  Isotopic exchange of ingested calcium between labeled sources. Evidence that ingested calcium does not form a common absorptive pool.

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10.  Calcium revisited: part I.

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Journal:  Bonekey Rep       Date:  2013-10-16
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