No more "I can’t take calcium. I have kidney stones!"
Shoreline Medical Services/ Hutter Chiropractic Office shares fresh nutrition research that shows the opposite: calcium taken with meals may actually defend you from forming kidney stones.
Yes, you have likely received information that calcium should not be eaten if you form kidney stones. This has been established to be false in several well-done studies. In reality, a high intake of calcium reduces the risk of kidney stones. There is no support that a low calcium diet reduces the risk of kidney stones. A study of 45,600 patients showed no correlation of calcium ingestion with kidney stone formation. (1) Now, that’s a huge study!
But why? Because kidney stones are made of calcium oxalate when calcium and oxalic acid bind together in the urine. Taking calcium with meals causes the calcium to bind with oxalate in the food we eat which keeps it from getting into the urinary tract where kidney stones form. (2) Great news for Groton kidney stone sufferers!
So, when challenged with the decision of whether or not to take calcium supplements for prevention of osteopenia, osteoporosis and the fractures of the spine and extremities that are prevalent with these conditions, keep this information in mind. Read these articles. And, like any other form of care, use good judgment, and consult your chiropractic clinic, Shoreline Medical Services/ Hutter Chiropractic Office in Groton, for advice on the best form of calcium to take, its dosage, and associated diet factors to assist in the best and safest ingestion of calcium. We are here for your health!
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