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      Comparative absorption of calcium sources and calcium citrate malate for the prevention of osteoporosis.

      Alternative medicine review : a journal of clinical therapeutic

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          Abstract

          Anthropologically speaking, humans were high consumers of calcium until the onset of the Agricultural Age, 10,000 years ago. Current calcium intake is one-quarter to one-third that of our evolutionary diet and, if we are genetically identical to the Late Paleolithic Homo sapiens, we may be consuming a calcium-deficient diet our bodies cannot adjust to by physiologic mechanisms. Meta-analyses of calcium and bone mass studies demonstrate supplementation of 500 to 1500 mg calcium daily improves bone mass in adolescents, young adults, older men, and postmenopausal women. Calcium citrate malate has high bioavailability and thus has been the subject of calcium studies in these populations. Positive effects have been seen in prepubertal girls, adolescents, and postmenopausal women. The addition of trace minerals and vitamin D in separate trials has improved the effect of calcium citrate malate on bone density and shown a reduction of fracture risk.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Altern Med Rev
          Alternative medicine review : a journal of clinical therapeutic
          1089-5159
          1089-5159
          Apr 1999
          : 4
          : 2
          Article
          10231607
          5f08ebd9-a9fb-4e36-92e1-b912e7f6447a
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