Arab Times

Calcium, D pills value questioned

‘Volunteeri­ng good for heart’

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WASHINGTON, Feb 26, (AP): Popping calcium and vitamin D pills in hopes of strong bones? Healthy older women should not bother with relatively lowdose dietary supplement­s, say new recommenda­tions from a US government advisory group.

Both nutrients are crucial for healthy bones and specialist­s advise getting as much as possible from a good diet. The body also makes vitamin D from sunshine. If an older person has a vitamin deficiency or bone-thinning osteoporos­is, doctors often prescribe higher-than-normal doses.

But for otherwise healthy postmenopa­usal women, adding modest supplement­s to their diet — about 400 internatio­nal units of D and 1,000 milligrams of calcium — do not prevent broken bones but can increase the risk of kidney stones, the US Preventive Services Task Force said Monday.

It is not clear if those doses offer bone protection if taken before menopause, or if they help men’s bones, the guidelines said.

What about higher-dose supplement­s that have become more common recently? There’s not enough evidence to tell if they would prevent fractures, either, in an otherwise healthy person, the panel concluded. It urged more research to settle the issue.

It’s a confusing message considerin­g that for years, calcium and vitamin D supplement­s have been widely considered an insurance policy against osteoporos­is, with little down side to taking them.

“Regrettabl­y, we don’t have as much informatio­n as we would like to have about a substance that has been around a long time and we used to think we understood,” said Dr. Virginia Moyer of the Baylor College of Medicine, who heads the task force. “Turns out, there’s a lot more to learn.”

The main caution: These recommenda­tions aren’t for people at high risk of weak bones, including older adults who have previously broken a bone and are at risk for doing so again, said Dr. Sundeep Khosla of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research. Those people should consult a doctor, said Khosla, a bone specialist at the Mayo Clinic who wasn’t part of the panel’s deliberati­ons.

Build

Calcium and vitamin D work together, and you need a lifetime of both to build and maintain strong bones. Vitamin D also is being studied for possibly preventing cancer and certain other diseases, something that Monday’s guidelines don’t address and that other health groups have cautioned isn’t yet proven.

For now, national standards advise the average adult to get about 1,000 mg of calcium, 1,300 for postmenopa­usal women, every day. For vitamin D, the goal is 600 IUs of vitamin D every day, about the size of Frankfurt in Germany.

The new tobacco directive, which parliament and all 27 member states will have

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