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Clinical Trial
. 2004 Nov;80(5):1422-7.
doi: 10.1093/ajcn/80.5.1422.

Effect of habitual dietary calcium intake on calcium supplementation in 12-14-y-old girls

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Free article
Clinical Trial

Effect of habitual dietary calcium intake on calcium supplementation in 12-14-y-old girls

Christian Mølgaard et al. Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Nov.
Free article

Abstract

Background: There is no agreement on how much calcium young girls need for optimal bone mineralization.

Objective: We evaluated whether the effect of calcium supplementation on whole-body bone mineral accretion depends on habitual calcium intake.

Design: This was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 1-y calcium intervention study of girls aged 12-14 y selected from a larger group according to habitual calcium intake: subgroup A (n = 60) habitually consumed 1000-1307 mg/d (40th-60th percentile), and subgroup B (n = 53) habitually consumed <713 mg/d (<20th percentile). The girls from each subgroup were randomly assigned to receive either 500 mg Ca/d or placebo. Whole-body bone mineral content (BMC), bone area (BA), bone mineral density (BMD), and BMC adjusted for BA, height, and weight (size-adjusted BMC) were measured at baseline and after 1 y.

Results: There was no significant effect modification of baseline habitual calcium intake on the relation between calcium supplementation and height, weight, BMC, size-adjusted BMC, BA, BMD, or alkaline phosphatase. Calcium supplementation had an effect on BMD (0.8%; P = 0.049) and tended to show signs of an effect on size-adjusted BMC (0.5%; P = 0.08).

Conclusion: A modest effect of calcium supplementation on BMD was shown. However, the effect was independent of habitual calcium intake.

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