High total calcium intake was associated with a decreased risk of incident atherosclerosis over long‐term follow‐up, particularly if achieved without supplement use. However, calcium supplement use may increase the risk for incident CAC.
http://annals.org/aim/article/2571713/calcium-intake-cardiovascular-disease-risk-updated-systematic-review-meta-analysis
Mei Chung, MPH, PhD; Alice M. Tang, SCM, PhD; Zhuxuan Fu, MPH; Ding Ding
Wang, MPH; Sydne Jennifer Newberry, MS, PhD
Abstract
Calcium is a nutrient essential for
maintaining bone health. A small proportion of total body calcium (less
than 1%) also regulates vascular contraction and vasodilation, muscle
function, nerve transmission, intracellular signaling, and hormonal
secretion. Vitamin D promotes calcium absorption in the gut and
maintains adequate serum calcium and phosphate concentrations, enabling
normal bone mineralization and preventing hypocalcemic tetany (1).
Although adequate calcium and vitamin D
intake is critical for maintaining bone health, the role of calcium and
vitamin D supplementation in older adults is unclear. Some systematic
reviews showed that combined calcium and vitamin D supplementation
reduced the risk for fractures in older adults (2, 3), whereas more recent systematic reviews reported inconsistent effects for fractures across randomized, controlled trials (4, 5).
Experts have raised concerns about a potential effect of a high intake
of calcium (with or without vitamin D) from foods and supplements on
cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes (6–8).
A meta-analysis of both study- and patient-level data from randomized
trials showed that calcium with or without vitamin D supplementation
increased the risk for myocardial infarction (pooled relative risk, 1.24
[95% CI, 1.07 to 1.45]) and stroke (pooled relative risk, 1.15 [CI,
1.00 to 1.32]) (9, 10).
However, a more recent meta-analysis showed that calcium with or
without vitamin D supplementation had no statistically significant
effects on coronary heart disease events (pooled relative risk, 1.02
[CI, 0.96 to 1.09]) or mortality (pooled relative risk, 1.04 [CI, 0.88
to 1.21]) (11).
Many researchers have questioned the strength of the body of evidence
linking supplemental calcium intake with CVD risk, noting that
cardiovascular outcomes have not been the primary end point of any trial
investigating calcium or calcium and vitamin D supplementation to date (12, 13).
To inform a joint position statement
from the National Osteoporosis Foundation (NOF) and American Society for
Preventive Cardiology, NOF commissioned a focused update and reanalysis
of 2 broader evidence reports examining the effects of calcium and
vitamin D on a wide range of clinical and intermediate outcomes (5, 14).
This update addresses the effects of calcium intake (from dietary or
supplemental sources), alone or in combination with vitamin D, on CVD
risk in generally healthy adults.
More at link.
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