Literature DB >> 8046060

ADSA Foundation Lecture. Low calcium intake: the culprit in many chronic diseases.

R P Heaney1, M J Barger-Lux.   

Abstract

Calcium is the fifth most abundant element in the earth's crust and is necessary for both plant and animal life today. Moreover, the natural diets of all mammals are rich in calcium. The diet of Stone Age human adults is estimated to have contained from 50 to 75 mmol of calcium (2000 to 3000 mg)/d, three to five times the median calcium intake of present-day US adults. Human physiology has adapted to this environmental abundance with an intestinal absorptive barrier and inefficient renal conservation of calcium. Although mammalian physiology contains mechanisms by which organisms can adjust to temporary environmental shortages, chronic calcium retention has a number of health consequences, most notably bone fragility, high blood pressure, and colon cancer. Evidence indicates that improvement in calcium intake (or in vitamin D status) prevents some portion of each of these multifactorial problems. At least 14 intervention studies have established the skeletal benefit of increased calcium intake during growth and among women in the late postmenopause. Other evidence suggests that adequate calcium may protect against salt-sensitive and pregnancy-associated hypertension and that high intakes of both dietary calcium and vitamin D reduce development of precancerous changes in colonic mucosa.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8046060     DOI: 10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(94)77052-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dairy Sci        ISSN: 0022-0302            Impact factor:   4.034


  2 in total

Review 1.  Calcium storage in plants and the implications for calcium biofortification.

Authors:  Maclin Dayod; Stephen Donald Tyerman; Roger Allen Leigh; Matthew Gilliham
Journal:  Protoplasma       Date:  2010-07-24       Impact factor: 3.356

2.  Inappropriate phosphate excretion in idiopathic hypercalciuria: the key to a common cause and future treatment?

Authors:  C P Williams; D F Child; P R Hudson; L D Soysa; G K Davies; M G Davies; A R De Bolla
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1996-11       Impact factor: 3.411

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.