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Calcium and 4,000 IU Vitamin D in Postmenopausal Women – RCT Nov 2013

The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism November 1, 2013 vol. 98 no. 11 E1702-E1709
John F. Aloia,
Ruban Dhaliwal,
Albert Shieh,
Mageda Mikhail,
Shahidul Islam and
James K. Yeh
Winthrop University Hospital, Bone Mineral Research Center, Mineola, New York 11501
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: John F. Aloia, MD, Winthrop University Hospital, 222 Station Plaza North, Suite 510, Mineola, New York 11501. E-mail: jaloia at winthrop.org.

Context: Bone health is influenced by the intake of both calcium and vitamin D.

Objective: Our objective was to evaluate the influence of calcium and vitamin D supplementation on PTH and bone turnover.

Setting, Patients, and Design: At an ambulatory research center, 159 postmenopausal healthy white women participated in this double-blind, placebo-controlled parallel, longitudinal factorial study that was 6 months in duration.

Interventions: Subjects were randomly allocated to 4 groups:

  • 1) double placebo,
  • 2) calcium (1200 mg daily) plus placebo,
  • 3) vitamin D3 (100 μg) plus placebo, and
  • 4) vitamin D3 and calcium.

Serum and urine were collected fasting and 2 hours after a calcium load at baseline and at 3 and 6 months.

Main Outcome Measures: Serum PTH, cross-linked C-telopeptide (CTX), and procollagen type I N-terminal propeptide (P1NP) were measured.

Results: Before study medication, a calcium load resulted in a decline in PTH and CTX and an increase in urinary calcium excretion. Serum CTX and P1NP declined over time with calcium supplementation but did not change with increased vitamin D intake. There was a decline in PTH in the vitamin D groups in the fasting state compared with placebo. Suppression of PTH was greater after a calcium load in the vitamin D groups. A calcium load decreased PTH and CTX and raised urinary calcium.

Adverse Events

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Conclusions: Fasting PTH declines with vitamin D supplementation. PTH declines after calcium intake. Supplementation of the diet with 1200 mg calcium/d reduces bone turnover markers, whereas supplementation with up to 100 μg vitamin D3/d does not.


PDF is attached at the bottom of this page

See also Vitamin D Life

Attached files

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3212 Adverse events.jpg admin 06 Nov, 2013 21:53 107.52 Kb 820
3211 Calcium sup.pdf PDF - 2013 admin 06 Nov, 2013 21:52 342.97 Kb 770
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