Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

calcium pills and arteries calcination

Does the daily use of 2 calcium pills (500 each) lead to blood vessles calcination?
5 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
684916 tn?1308686859
This article was in our newspaper yesterday. I thought that it would interest the nutrition community.




This story is taken from Sacbee / Medical News / Health & Fitness



Integrative Medicine: Hard data on calcium, bones and heart risk
Published Sunday, Aug. 08, 2010


Your doctor may have told you to take calcium supplements to protect your bones and reduce the risk of fractures. A new study in the British Medical Journal may turn that advice upside down.

Researchers pooled the results of 15 medical trials in which a total of about 12,000 people were given calcium-supplement pills. They found that the people taking the calcium had a 30 percent increase in the risk of heart attack compared to those who did not. There was also an insignificant increase in the risk of stroke and death.

The risk of heart attack was greater among those with the highest intake of calcium pills (more than 800 milligrams a day); it was not dependent on the age or sex of the participants, or the type of calcium supplement.

Further, a randomized, controlled trial published in 2008 looked at the effects of calcium supplements on vascular disease. In this study, 1,471 postmenopausal women were randomized to receive Citracal (1,000 mg per day of elemental calcium in divided doses) vs. a placebo for five years.

At the end of the study, the women taking calcium pills had a greater risk of heart attack, stroke and sudden death compared with those taking the placebo; the risk of having a heart attack was about 50 percent higher, the risk of stroke almost 40 percent higher.

Why might calcium increase the risk of vascular disease? Observational studies in the past have suggested that people with higher intakes of calcium actually had a lower risk of vascular disease; this is medically plausible because calcium does seem to slightly increase the amount of good cholesterol (HDL) in the blood and lower the bad cholesterol (LDL).

However, we know that calcium can also cause mischief in our arteries; those of you who have had a CT scan of your heart to screen for heart disease know your assessed risk is based on your calcium score.

When our arteries are inflamed from poor diet, obesity, smoking and couch-potato lifestyles, calcium is pulled into that inflamed area from the bloodstream. It then gets laid down in the blood vessels, leading to atherosclerosis or hardening of the arteries. Hence, a higher calcium score on a CT scan implies more disease in the arteries that feed the heart.

So is all calcium problematic? The studies above involved people who took calcium pills. What about foods that are high in calcium – do they increase your risk of heart disease, too? Probably not.

When you take a calcium pill, this leads to an acute increase in blood-calcium levels, and this rapid increase likely delivers more calcium to your arteries, where it can cause damage. Calcium in food, on the other hand, is absorbed much more slowly and does not lead to a significant change in blood levels; hence it does not seem to cause the problems that pills do.

So what's the bottom line? Your food is your medicine. Eat a wide variety of plant foods, including dark-green leafy veggies, whole grains, legumes, nuts and seeds, all of which contain calcium (e.g., 1 cup of cooked broccoli has 180 mg of calcium).

You can also protect your heart health and bone health by limiting your intake of animal food and salty foods – not only are these associated with a higher risk of heart disease, they also accelerate bone loss.

In fact, a study from Yale in the 1990s looked at fracture rates in 16 countries around the world and found that people in countries with the lowest intake of meat, eggs, fish and dairy products also had the lowest fracture risk – another reason to eat more veggies and less meat.

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
No, what you do is...make sure you take a multivitamin/mineral of some sort.
Most have little calcium.
Then take your Cal/Mag separately, preferably 1 to 1 ratio, i.e., 500mgs. Calcium,
500 Magnesium.

You take these with food always.

fb  CN
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
So do you think that calcium should be taken together with a multivitamin pill? Some books and numerous internet sites suggest that peaple take daily a definite amount of calcium mg, that is not sufficient in a multivitamin pill. What to do to with all these supplement pills? One multivitamin pill gives only small amounts of all the necessary vit/minerals. At the same time taking some separate vitamins and minerals, like calcium alone is dangeorus for health as it may lead to the blood vessels calcination. How to achieve the optimal vitamins and minerals supply through the daily pills use?
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
My opinion,
Taking calcium tablets/supps without a full spectrum multi and magnesium, D,
is risking calcification of arteries.  This is proven in the literature.
It takes time, but can occur.  I would not do it.
Calcium alone is a bad idea.  Most supplements of vits/mins alone is a bad idea.
They all work in concert, especially for bone, and vitamins you would never have
thought would play a part, do.
Food for thought and your bones.

fb  CN.
Helpful - 0
144586 tn?1284666164
That is a controversial issue among the cognescenti.

Briefly, the groups are divided into two camps:

(a) Camp "A' says it doesn't make much difference and that more calcium if good for you. I understand the head of the Institute promoting this view is a genuine Holstein Cow, who actually graduated from Harvard Medical school, and now a consultant to the AMA, genetically altered to talk.

(b) Camp "B" is headed by Dr. Hans Selye, who coined the term Calciphalaxis in 1962 and conducted hundreds of studies documenting the relationship of excess calcium to premature aging. Do an internet search on Dr. Selye.

I have no strong opinions, the issue being above my pay grade, however there appears to be a genetic component in susceptability to the effects of excess calcium.
Helpful - 0
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the Nutrition Community

Top Healthy Living Answerers
Avatar universal
Arlington, VA
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
14 super-healthy foods that are worth the hype
Small changes make a big impact with these easy ways to cut hundreds of calories a day.
Forget the fountain of youth – try flossing instead! Here are 11 surprising ways to live longer.
From STD tests to mammograms, find out which screening tests you need - and when to get them.
Tips and moves to ease backaches
Here are 12 simple – and fun! – ways to boost your brainpower.