Safety of Calcium and Vitamin D Supplements, a Randomized Controlled Trial.
Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 2018 Sep 4. doi: 10.1111/cen.13848. [Epub ahead of print]
Aloia JF1, Katumuluwa S1, Stolberg A1, Usera G1, Mikhail M1, Hoofnagle AN2, Islam S1.
1 Winthrop University Hospital Bone Mineral Research Center, Mineola, NY.
2 University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
- IoM again fails to look at interactions - Nov 2010
- Excess Calcium was known to be a problem by supplement suppliers back in 2010,
- but researchers then, as well as now, seem unaware of it.
Green diamonds = supplements actually sold - The high-dose Vitamin D (20,000-140,000 IU ) protocol which cures Multiple Sclerosis makes a extremely strong point to minimize Calciun intake and drink a lot of water
If you feel you must take Calcium supplements, you can offset the resulting problems by adding Magnesium and Vitamin K2 - Overview Toxicity of vitamin D has the following chart
- Calcium added for osteoporosis may not help and might be harmful – Feb 2018
- Calcium increased risk of side effects in trials (no problems with just Vitamin D) – meta-analysis Nov 2017
- Risk of Ischemic Stroke doubles if take more than 1 gram of Calcium daily for years – May 2017
- Aggressive Prostate Cancer in blacks with low vitamin D – 7X more likely if added Calcium – Jan 2017
- Is a health problem associated with Low vitamin D, Low Magnesium, or too much Calcium – Jan 2016
OBJECTIVE:
It is anticipated that an intake of vitamin D found acceptable by Endocrine Society Guidelines (10,000 IU/day) with co-administered calcium supplements may result in frequent hypercalciuria and hypercalcemia. This combination may be associated with kidney stones. The objective of this study was to compare the episodes of hypercalciuria and hypercalcemia from calcium supplements co-administered with 10,000 IU or 600 IU vitamin D daily. This design allows a comparison of the Institute of Medicine recommendation for the RDA of vitamin D along with the Upper Limit of calcium intake with the high intake of vitamin D suggested by the Endocrine Society.
CONTEXT: Harms of currently recommended high intake of vitamin D have not been studied.
DESIGN: The design was a randomized controlled trial with 2 groups with evaluation every 3 months for one year: (1) CaCO3 1,200 mg/day with 10,000 IU vitamin D3 /day or (2) CaCO3 1,200 mg/day with 600 IU vitamin D3 .
PATIENTS: This study was conducted in an ambulatory research center in healthy, white postmenopausal women.
MEASUREMENTS: Serum and 24-hour urine calcium were measured.
RESULTS:
Hypercalcemia and hypercalciuria occurred in both groups. At the final visit, 19/48 in the high dose D group had hypercalciuria. The odds of developing hypercalciuria was 3.6 [OR=3.6 (1.39, 9.3)] times higher in the high dose D group. The odds of developing hypercalcemia did not differ between groups.
CONCLUSIONS:
The safe upper level of vitamin D recommended by the Endocrine Society when accompanied by calcium supplements results in frequent hypercalciuria. The risk of kidney stones at these levels should be investigated.
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