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Dietary Calcium Intake and Calcium Supplementation in Hungarian Patients with Osteoporosis

Purpose. Adequate calcium intake is the basis of osteoporosis therapy—when this proves insufficient, even specific antiosteoporotic agents cannot exert their actions properly. Methods. Our representative survey analyzed the dietary intake and supplementation of calcium in 8033 Hungarian female and m...

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Autores principales: Speer, Gábor, Szamosujvári, Pál, Dombai, Péter, Csóré, Katalin, Mikófalvi, Kinga, Steindl, Tímea, Streicher, Ildikó, Tarsoly, Júlia, Zajzon, Gergely, Somogyi, Péter, Szamosújvári, Pál, Lakatos, Péter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3662157/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23737777
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/754328
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author Speer, Gábor
Szamosujvári, Pál
Dombai, Péter
Csóré, Katalin
Mikófalvi, Kinga
Steindl, Tímea
Streicher, Ildikó
Tarsoly, Júlia
Zajzon, Gergely
Somogyi, Péter
Szamosújvári, Pál
Lakatos, Péter
author_facet Speer, Gábor
Szamosujvári, Pál
Dombai, Péter
Csóré, Katalin
Mikófalvi, Kinga
Steindl, Tímea
Streicher, Ildikó
Tarsoly, Júlia
Zajzon, Gergely
Somogyi, Péter
Szamosújvári, Pál
Lakatos, Péter
author_sort Speer, Gábor
collection PubMed
description Purpose. Adequate calcium intake is the basis of osteoporosis therapy—when this proves insufficient, even specific antiosteoporotic agents cannot exert their actions properly. Methods. Our representative survey analyzed the dietary intake and supplementation of calcium in 8033 Hungarian female and male (mean age: 68 years) (68.01 (CI95: 67.81–68.21)) patients with osteoporosis. Results. Mean intake from dietary sources was 665 ± 7.9 mg (68.01 (CI95: 67.81–68.21)) daily. A significant positive relationship could be detected between total dietary calcium intake and lumbar spine BMD (P = 0.045), whereas such correlation could not be demonstrated with femoral T-score. Milk consumption positively correlated with femur (P = 0.041), but not with lumbar BMD. The ingestion of one liter of milk daily increased the T-score by 0.133. Average intake from supplementation was 558 ± 6.2 mg (68.01 (CI95: 67.81–68.21)) daily. The cumulative dose of calcium—from both dietary intake and supplementation—was significantly associated with lumbar (r = 0.024, P = 0.049), but not with femur BMD (r = 0.021, P = 0.107). The currently recommended 1000–1500 mg total daily calcium intake was achieved in 34.5% of patients only. It was lower than recommended in 47.8% of the cases and substantially higher in 17.7% of subjects. Conclusions. We conclude that calcium intake in Hungarian osteoporotic patients is much lower than the current recommendation, while routinely applied calcium supplementation will result in inappropriately high calcium intake in numerous patients.
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spelling pubmed-36621572013-06-04 Dietary Calcium Intake and Calcium Supplementation in Hungarian Patients with Osteoporosis Speer, Gábor Szamosujvári, Pál Dombai, Péter Csóré, Katalin Mikófalvi, Kinga Steindl, Tímea Streicher, Ildikó Tarsoly, Júlia Zajzon, Gergely Somogyi, Péter Szamosújvári, Pál Lakatos, Péter Int J Endocrinol Research Article Purpose. Adequate calcium intake is the basis of osteoporosis therapy—when this proves insufficient, even specific antiosteoporotic agents cannot exert their actions properly. Methods. Our representative survey analyzed the dietary intake and supplementation of calcium in 8033 Hungarian female and male (mean age: 68 years) (68.01 (CI95: 67.81–68.21)) patients with osteoporosis. Results. Mean intake from dietary sources was 665 ± 7.9 mg (68.01 (CI95: 67.81–68.21)) daily. A significant positive relationship could be detected between total dietary calcium intake and lumbar spine BMD (P = 0.045), whereas such correlation could not be demonstrated with femoral T-score. Milk consumption positively correlated with femur (P = 0.041), but not with lumbar BMD. The ingestion of one liter of milk daily increased the T-score by 0.133. Average intake from supplementation was 558 ± 6.2 mg (68.01 (CI95: 67.81–68.21)) daily. The cumulative dose of calcium—from both dietary intake and supplementation—was significantly associated with lumbar (r = 0.024, P = 0.049), but not with femur BMD (r = 0.021, P = 0.107). The currently recommended 1000–1500 mg total daily calcium intake was achieved in 34.5% of patients only. It was lower than recommended in 47.8% of the cases and substantially higher in 17.7% of subjects. Conclusions. We conclude that calcium intake in Hungarian osteoporotic patients is much lower than the current recommendation, while routinely applied calcium supplementation will result in inappropriately high calcium intake in numerous patients. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2013 2013-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3662157/ /pubmed/23737777 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/754328 Text en Copyright © 2013 Gábor Speer et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Speer, Gábor
Szamosujvári, Pál
Dombai, Péter
Csóré, Katalin
Mikófalvi, Kinga
Steindl, Tímea
Streicher, Ildikó
Tarsoly, Júlia
Zajzon, Gergely
Somogyi, Péter
Szamosújvári, Pál
Lakatos, Péter
Dietary Calcium Intake and Calcium Supplementation in Hungarian Patients with Osteoporosis
title Dietary Calcium Intake and Calcium Supplementation in Hungarian Patients with Osteoporosis
title_full Dietary Calcium Intake and Calcium Supplementation in Hungarian Patients with Osteoporosis
title_fullStr Dietary Calcium Intake and Calcium Supplementation in Hungarian Patients with Osteoporosis
title_full_unstemmed Dietary Calcium Intake and Calcium Supplementation in Hungarian Patients with Osteoporosis
title_short Dietary Calcium Intake and Calcium Supplementation in Hungarian Patients with Osteoporosis
title_sort dietary calcium intake and calcium supplementation in hungarian patients with osteoporosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3662157/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23737777
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/754328
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