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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: fractures + hip + calcium  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 61 for fractures hip calcium. (0.31 seconds) 
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Take care of your aging bones
Belleville News Democrat,  USA - Nov 28, 2008
For example, the most devastating complications are hip fractures, with 24 percent of the patients ending up in nursing homes, 50 percent never reaching ...
Key health benefits in onions and cukes
News Sentinel, IN -
?Studies have also linked diets adequate in vitamin K with a reduced risk of hip fracture in the elderly,? says Gillitt. Nutrition Stats: Serving size: one ...
Calcium May Improve Bone Mineral Density in Men
Medscape (registration) - Nov 11, 2008
There are 30% of older men who experience fragility fractures, with men accounting for one quarter of all hip fractures. This is a double-blind, randomized, ...
Excess Calcium Intake Can Raise Your Risk of Cardiovascular Disease
Natural News.com, AZ - Nov 8, 2008
(NaturalNews) Are postmenopausal women putting themselves at increased risk for cardiovascular disease and hip fractures by consuming excessive calcium? ...

TheMedGuru
Can Vitamin D Protect Against Breast Cancer?
TIME - Nov 12, 2008
"But it's not really ethical to tell postmenopausal women not to take vitamin D or calcium, because we know it protects against hip fractures. ...
No breast cancer benefit from vitamins Boston Globe (registration)
Calcium Plus Vitamin D Supplementation Is Not Associated With A ... Science Daily (press release)
Studies: Don't Rely on Vitamins to Reduce Breast-Cancer, Heart ... Women on the Web
Curetoday.com (press release) - TopNews
all 80 news articles »
Calcium and Vitamin D Not Protective Against Breast Cancer but ...
Medscape (registration) - Nov 17, 2008
In this WHI study, women received 1000 mg of calcium with 400 IU of vitamin D daily or placebo to determine the effects of supplement use on hip fracture. ...

Daily Mail
Exercise helps brittle bones, so I go once a week to Tiffany's and ...
Daily Mail, UK - Nov 15, 2008
There are 230000 fragility fractures in the UK each year, and hip fractures alone cost the NHS more than ?2million a year. But breaking a bone can be far ...
Men Need More Calcium, Too
HealthandAge.com - Nov 19, 2008
Men who received 600 milligrams of calcium per day did not display these same increases. Men account for 25% of all hip fractures, and 30% of older men ...
Most provinces get C grade on osteoporosis treatment
CTV.ca, Canada - Nov 24, 2008
Of those who suffer hip fractures, as many as 23 per cent of women and an even higher percentage of men will die within six months due to related ...
National Report Points To Unmet Needs Of Canadians Living With ... Canada NewsWire (press release)
all 3 news articles »
Proper foods help prevent thinning and broken bones
Little About, India - Nov 25, 2008
With aging kidneys and a drop in calcium intake, the body removes skeletal calcium to help neutralize the acid buildup. Most participants surveyed were ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: risk + calcium + 0.31  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Lipitor 80 mg Reduced the Risk of Heart Attack and Stroke in ...
MarketWatch -
... type 2 diabetes and chronic kidney disease, Lipitor(R) (atorvastatin calcium) 80 mg significantly reduced the risk of major cardiovascular events, ...
Sticking to diet advice cuts colon cancer risk
Reuters -
All recommend eating a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains and healthy oils; getting enough calcium and vitamin D through sources such as dairy ...
Personal Health Sorting Out Coffee?s Contradictions
New York Times, United States - Aug 5, 2008
Dr. Robert Heaney of Creighton University says that caffeine?s negative effect on calcium can be offset by as little as one or two tablespoons of milk. ...
Screening: Higher Rates of Hearing Loss Are Found New York Times
all 4 news articles »
Pregorexic: Are Some Pregnant Women Putting Their Fetuses at Risk?
FOXNews - Aug 5, 2008
Alvarez said expectant mothers need to consume certain vitamins such as folic acid and vitamin b, as well as calcium to ensure the health of their unborn ...
Low Vitamin D Intake Boosts Heart Attack, Stroke Risk by 60 Percent
Natural News.com, AZ -
The connection between Vitamin D and bone health is well-established, due to the vitamin's role in helping the body absorb calcium. Vitamin D deficiency can ...
High Milk Intake May Boost Ovarian Cancer Risk
Online - International News Network, Pakistan -
"In contrast, there is strong evidence that milk consumption (and a high intake of calcium, which is found in milk) may reduce the risk of colorectal cancer ...
Evaluate pros and cons about vitamins, supplements when ...
Statesman Journal, OR - 21 minutes ago
The verdict is in that calcium, along with magnesium and vitamin D, can improve bone health. Hundreds if not thousands of studies have been performed on ...
Getting to the heart of ED is crucial
Park Ridge Herald Advocate, IL -
Men with erectile dysfunction should talk about cardiovascular risk factors with their doctors. Dr. Nejd F. Alsikafi, a urologist, practices in Gurnee. ...
Breast cancer: What you need to know
Food Consumer, IL - Aug 5, 2008
Calcium: A new Australian animal model study showed that calcium deficiency due to low dietary intake or vitamin D deficiency increases the rate of calcium ...
Prehypertension During Young Adulthood and Coronary Calcium Later ...
Cardiosource, DC - Aug 3, 2008
Is there an association between prehypertension exposure before age 35 years and coronary calcium later in life? Methods: Coronary Artery Risk Development ...
Source: Google News

Intake of Potassium, Magnesium, Calcium, and Fiber and Risk of Stroke Among US Men -
A Ascherio, EB Rimm, MA Hernan, EL Giovannucci, I … - Circulation, 1998 - Am Heart Assoc
... the multivariate RR of total stroke among supplement users was 0.31 (95% CI ... associations
were found between intakes of sodium and calcium and risk of stroke ...

Calcium, vitamin D, dairy products, and risk of colorectal cancer in the Cancer Prevention Study II … -
ML McCullough, AS Robertson, C Rodriguez, EJ … - Cancer Causes and Control, 2003 - Springer
... 500 mg supplemental calcium was still associated with a reduced risk (RR ? 0.65 ... Calcium,
vitamin D, and colorectal cancer ... p-trend 0.33 0.36 0.49 0.46 0.31 0.68 ...

Calcium, vitamin D, sunshine exposure, dairy products and colon cancer risk (United States) -
E Kampman, ML Slattery, B Caan, JD Potter - Cancer Causes and Control, 2000 - Springer
... Cheese (men): 0.08;0.18;0.31;0.52; women: 0.08;0.17;0.29 ... thus strengthen our conclusion
that higher calcium intake is associated with a reduced risk of colon ...

… of cola consumption on urinary biochemical and physicochemical risk factors associated with calcium -
A Rodgers - Urological Research, 1999 - Springer
... Biochemical risk factor Males ... 3.32 (0.47) 3.53 (0.45) 0.75 3.77 (0.31) 2.92 (0.31)
0.06 A ... Calcium 4.07 (0.47) 4.01 (0.47) 0.93 2.56 (0.32) 2.26 (0.32) 0.51 ...

DIETARY CALCIUM INTAKE AS A MITIGATING FACTOR IN COLON CANCER -
ML SLATTERY, W SORENSON, MH FORD - American Journal of Epidemiology, 1988 - Oxford Univ Press
... of calories (OR = 0.41), protein (OR = 0.31), and fat ... females, with the odds ratio
for calcium being 0.50 ... Risk associated with calories, protein, and fat also ...

A prospective study of calcium intake from diet and supplements and risk of ischemic heart disease … -
WK Al-Delaimy, E Rimm, WC Willett, MJ Stampfer, FB … - American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2003 - Am Soc Nutrition
... For supplemental calcium intake, the relative risk of developing ... quintile with nonusers
of supplements was 0.87 (95% CI: 0.64, 1.19; P for trend = 0.31). ...

… to Correct Low 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Levels, Calcium, and Alkaline Phosphatase in Patients at Risk of … -
N COLLINS, J MAHER, M COLE, M BAKER, N CALLAGHAN - QJM, 1991 - Oxford Univ Press
... 2.39?0.31 2.25?0.65 2.77?l.01 ... 25-hydroxyvitamin D and serum calcium levels in
institutionalised epileptic subjects: associated risk factors, consequences ...

Prospective study on milk products, calcium and cancers of the colon and rectum -
R Jaervinen, P Knekt, T Hakulinen, A Aromaa - European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2001 - nature.com
... was 0.31 (95% CI=0.08-1.15, P for trend 0.03). Intake of vitamin D or total dietary
calcium was not significantly related to colorectal cancer risk, whereas ...

Changes in serum calcium, phosphate, and PTH and the risk of death in incident dialysis patients: A … -
ML Melamed, JA Eustace, L Plantinga, BG Jaar, NE … - Kidney International, 2006 - pt.wkhealth.com
... CaP increased 1.10 mg 2 /dl 2 (0.31-1.88) (P ... The time-dependent model showed that
having a calcium >9.73 mg ... dl was associated with a 52% increased risk of death ...

Dietary Calcium and Vitamin D Intake and Risk of Colorectal Cancer: A Prospective Cohort Study in … -
P Terry, JA Baron, L Bergkvist, L Holmberg, A Wolk - Nutrition and Cancer, 2002 - Lawrence Earlbaum
... P for trend c 0.008 0.02 0.31 0.008 0.15 ... premenopausal (aged 30?55 yr) at baseline,
weak-to-mod- erate reductions in risk with high calcium intake were ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Calcium and Vitamin D slightly decrease risk of hip fractures in older women

Women's Health Initiative ( WHI ) found that taking Calcium and Vitamin D slightly decreased the risk of hip fractures in older women, but not the risk for other types of fractures or for colorectal cancer.
Additionally, the supplements slightly increased the incidence of kidney stones.

A researcher at the Stanford University School of Medicine who helped oversee the WHI study said the results don't change current recommendations that women over age 50 should consume 1,200 milligrams of Calcium and 400-600 international units of Vitamin D each day to maintain their bone health. However, Marcia Stefanick, at the Stanford Prevention Research Center, pointed out that adequate levels of these nutrients don't have to come from supplements.

The findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

They are the latest clinical results from the WHI, a 15-year, broad-based look at the causes and prevention of diseases affecting older women. Previous WHI studies have involved hormone therapy, low-fat diets and heart disease.

The Calcium/Vitamin D study involved more than 36,000 postmenopausal women between the ages of 50 and 79 who were tracked over the course of seven years. Researchers wanted to determine whether women who took the supplements could reduce their risk of bone fractures, especially hip fractures, and colorectal cancer.

Half of the trial participants were randomly assigned to take daily supplements of 1,000 mg. of elemental Calcium ( as Calcium carbonate ) and 400 IU of Vitamin D3-the recommended dosage to prevent osteoporosis that was in effect when the WHI trial was designed in the early 1990s.
The remaining women were given a placebo.

The study found that women assigned to take the Calcium and Vitamin D pills experienced a 12 percent reduction in hip fractures, a difference that was not statistically significant ( 14 fractures per 10,000 women on the supplements compared with 16 per 10,000 in the placebo group ) over the course of the seven-year study. But not all women adhered completely to the supplement regimen. What the study revealed, though, is that among those who took 80 percent or more of the recommended dosage, there was a 29 percent decrease in hip fractures.

The supplements didn't make a difference in reducing the rates of spine, wrist and other fractures, or in reducing the risk of colorectal cancer.

Although most women tolerated the supplements well, there was a 17 percent increase in the rate of kidney stones ( 34 cases per 10,000 women in the supplement group, compared with 29 cases per 10,000 women taking a placebo ).
Kidney stones are hardened mineral deposits that form in the kidney and often cause pain when discharged from the body.

Calcium and Vitamin D have long been staples in the effort to improve bone health among older women, who are four times more likely than men of the same age to suffer from osteoporosis - a disease in which bones become fragile and more likely to break.
The condition contributes to 1.5 million fractures each year in the United States, including more than 300,000 hip fractures.
Forty percent of women over age 50 experience a fracture of the hip, spine or wrist in their lifetime.

Additionally, some observational studies have suggested that a higher intake of Calcium and Vitamin D could lower the risk for colorectal cancer, but results from past clinical trials have been mixed.
Colorectal cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States for men and women combined.

With the new evidence from the WHI trial, Stefanick said women should continue to make sure they get enough Calcium and Vitamin D for their bone health, but that they shouldn't expect this to make a difference in preventing colorectal cancer.

" Because we don't have good evidence of how to prevent colorectal cancer, the importance of early detection through regular screenings should be emphasized for both women and men from age 50 onward, " Stefanick said.

The Calcium/Vitamin D study is the last of three WHI randomized clinical trials to be published.

Source: Stanford University Medical Center, 2006

 
 
 
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