Newswise, April 5, 2016 –
In older people, higher dietary calcium intake may lower the risk of
cardiovascular disease, but not of stroke and fracture, new research from South
Korea suggests.
“The role of dietary calcium intake in
cardiovascular disease, stroke and fracture is controversial. Moreover,
participants in previous studies were from populations that had calcium-rich
diets.
“We aimed to evaluate whether high dietary calcium
intake increases the risk of CVD, stroke and fracture in a population with low
calcium intake,” said lead author Sung Hye Kong, MD, resident physician in the
Department of Internal Medicine of Seoul National University Hospital in Seoul,
South Korea.
Kong and colleagues conducted their research among
individuals in Korea’s ongoing prospective community-based Ansung and Ansan
Cohort Study that began in 2001.
Of the 4,589 men and 5,042 women in the cohort
study’s database who were 40 years of age and above at baseline and were
followed up for an average of 13 years, the authors performed their analyses in
2,199 men and 2,704 women over 50 years of age without previous cardiovascular
disease and stroke.
The individuals in the study reported their dietary
food intake in periodic food frequency questionnaires. Cardiovascular disease,
stroke and fractures were recorded during interviews and examinations every two
years. In their statistical analyses, the authors made adjustments for age,
body mass index, vegetable and fruit intake, protein and sodium intake,
physical activity, smoking and drinking, history of hypertension and diabetes,
total energy from the diet, and additionally adjusted for menopausal status and
hormone replacement therapy in women.
In older women in this population with low dietary
calcium intake, higher dietary calcium intake was significantly associated with
decreased risk of cardiovascular disease, but not significantly associated with
risk of stroke and fracture.
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