Literature DB >> 7832578

Effects of supplemental dietary calcium on quantitative and qualitative fecal fat excretion in man.

J W Welberg1, J F Monkelbaan, E G de Vries, F A Muskiet, A Cats, E T Oremus, W Boersma-van Ek, H van Rijsbergen, R van der Meer, N H Mulder.   

Abstract

Oral calcium supplementation is thought to be a useful interventional agent to decrease colon cancer risk. This is supposedly due, at least in part, to the binding of bile acids and fatty acids by calcium in the colon, thus prohibiting the damaging effects of these substances to the epithelium. To determine the effects of calcium supplementation on fecal fat excretion, 24 subjects kept a fat and calcium constant diet for one week and were supplemented with either 0, 2 or 4 g elemental calcium as calcium carbonate in a double-blind fashion. At the end of the week 72-hour feces was collected, and total fat, neutral fat, fatty acids and the ratio of polyunsaturated and saturated fatty acids (P/S ratio) were measured. Calcium dose-dependently increased the percentual excretion of total fat as related to fat intake: 6.8 +/- 0.9% during 0 g, 7.4 +/- 1.0% during 2 g and 10.2 +/- 1.4% during 4 g, r = 0.44, p = 0.03. This was due to increased fatty acid excretion, excretion of neutral fat was not affected, nor was the P/S ratio. It is concluded that calcium supplementation modestly increases fecal fatty acid excretion. No adverse metabolic effects are to be expected from this in case of long-term calcium supplementation in subjects at increased risk for colon cancer.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7832578     DOI: 10.1159/000177810

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Nutr Metab        ISSN: 0250-6807            Impact factor:   3.374


  17 in total

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10.  Effect of dairy and non-dairy calcium on fecal fat excretion in lactose digester and maldigester obese adults.

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