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Review
. 1986 Nov;45(12):2758-62.

The calcium requirement and factors causing calcium loss

  • PMID: 3533641
Review

The calcium requirement and factors causing calcium loss

H Spencer et al. Fed Proc. 1986 Nov.

Abstract

Studies carried out under strictly controlled conditions during different calcium intakes in adult males have shown that the average calcium balance was only slightly positive (+22 mg/day) during a calcium intake of 800 mg/day, the recommended dietary calcium intake, not taking into consideration dermal losses of calcium. During this calcium intake, the calcium balances were negative in 34% of the subjects studied. Increasing the calcium intake to 1200 mg/day resulted in a significant increase of the calcium balance; further increases to different intake levels up to 2300 mg/day did not improve the calcium balance further. Increasing the phosphorus intake up to 2000 mg/day as well as increasing the protein intake from 1 g/kg body weight to 2 g/kg, given as meat, did not have an adverse effect on calcium metabolism. A variety of drugs, notably aluminum-containing antacids, induced calcium loss. Increasing the calcium intake more than 10-fold from 200 to 2500 mg/day did not lower the blood pressure in a large number of normotensive patients and in a small number of hypertensive patients studied.

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