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Calcium Citrate & Vitamin D
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| 180 Rapid Disintegration Vegetable Caplets |
$14.95 |
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Animal Free and Gluten Free
- The National Institute of Health Consensus Development Conference on
Optimal Calcium Intakes recommended that all people over 65 take 1500 milligrams of calcium a day to reduce the
risk of fractures due to bone-thinning and osteoporosis. Younger people should consume 1000-1200mg calcium per
day. People who don't get this amount of calcium from their diet should consider taking calcium supplements. Women
who consume sufficient amounts of calcium or take supplements most of their lives usually don't develop osteoporosis.
- Of the 10 million Americans estimated to have osteoporosis, eight million
are women and two million are men.**
- Women who start taking calcium supplements just before they reach menopause
or shortly after also benefit because the supplemental calcium replaces the excreted calcium.
- Although women are far more susceptible to developing osteoporosis,
older men may also eventually have bone problems.
- If you do not consume enough calcium, you should definitely consider
adding a calcium supplement to your daily diet to prevent osteoporosis.
- Many studies indicate that calcium citrate is the form your body can
most easily recognize and use. It is also easy on the stomach.
A New Epidemic
Nearly 20 years ago, health researchers at Harvard University sounded
an alarm stating that there was a preventable epidemic threatening our country - calcium deficiency. The alarm
helped to make people realize that many were not getting enough calcium from their diets. As a result, the sale
of calcium supplements increased and several food products containing supplemental calcium appeared on food shelves.
Unfortunately, the dire warnings issued by the Harvard group were not sufficient to help prevent the occurrence
of a new epidemic, also related to calcium. The epidemic threatening us today is a deficiency of vitamin D.
Vitamin D is needed in the body to bring about the efficient absorption of calcium. Although this fascinating chemical
is called a vitamin (read about its interesting history in "There's Something Funny About Nutrition")
it is actually a hormone that jump-starts the production of a protein called calcium-binding protein (scientists
aren't the most clever when it comes to naming things). This protein attaches to calcium in the intestine and carries
it to the blood so it can be whisked off to the millions of cells that absolutely depend upon calcium to function.
When there isn't enough vitamin D in the body, calcium is not absorbed or whisked adequately so the blood starts
stealing it from the bones. Obviously, this leads to weak bones and therein lies the problem that concerns physicians
throughout our country.
Vitamin D gets into our bodies either from eating foods in which it's stored-vitamin D is a fat soluble vitamin
which should give you some idea where this is going-or by the conversion of cholesterol in the skin. The conversion
of cholesterol to vitamin D requires ultraviolet rays from the sun. Thus, people need to either eat fatty foods
that contain vitamin D, such as milk and other dairy products, or spend more time outdoors. Whoa! "Dairy products
contain saturated fats that make us, well, fat so we diss them and we have all these neat, gory computer games
so who wants to be outdoors?" This from way too many teenagers of this generation who are showing up in clinics
with mysterious fractures that turn out to be a result of bone weakness resulting from vitamin D deficiency.
Physicians from every locale, but particularly in the northern states are seeing more cases of fractures from weakened
bones. The weak bones result from poor absorption of calcium. Whether or not young people consume calcium fortified
foods or drinks is not relevant if they aren't getting enough vitamin D to activate the production of the transporter
that gets calcium out of the intestine and into the blood. Unfortunately, many youths who do go out in the sun
are often at risk of vitamin D deficiency because they have heeded their doctor's or parents' warnings about skin
cancer and slather on sunscreen, which blocks the ultraviolet rays of the sun. Youths from dark-skinned ethnic
groups are also prone to D deficiency because their skin doesn't absorb light readily.
What can be done to ward off this encroaching epidemic?
Some physicians, probably not dermatologists, suggest spending about ten minutes a few times a week in the sun
without sunscreen. Parents could threaten and cajole their children to drink fortified milk but this isn't always
successful. Of course, the most obvious remedy is daily consumption of a calcium supplement containing vitamin
D.
Strong Bones, Strong Body
Anyone who has had a broken bone knows that dealing with a cast is no
fun. We’re offering something to help prevent that from happening.
BioActive Nutrients offers Calcium Citrate with Vitamin D, because Calcium is possibly one of the most important
minerals in the body. Calcium Citrate is the form your body can most easily recognize and use, and the Vitamin
D plays such a crucial role in carrying Calcium from the intestines to the blood.
The people most afflicted with a deficiency are the elderly, which is due to years of inadequate supplies of calcium
in the diet, and lack of supplementation.
Children, women, and even men should consume the recommended daily intake to keep their entire body working efficiently
and to ward off osteoporosis in the future.
Supplement Facts
Serving Size: 1 Caplet
Servings per container: 180 |
| Ingredients |
Amount per Serving
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% Daily Value
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Vitamin D-2 (as ergocalciferol)
Calcium (as Calcium Citrate) |
134 I.U.
334 mg
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34%
34%
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| * Daily Value not established |
| Other ingredients:
Vegetable Stearine, Cellulose, Cellulose Gum, Calcium Stearate. |
| Directions: |
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- Take one caplet three or four times daily, or as directed by a physician.
Taking one or two caplets at bedtime may help ease nightly leg cramps.**
- Keep out of reach of children.
- This product contains no added sugar, salt, yeast, preservatives, aritificial
colors, or flavors. Unconditionally guaranteed for purity, freshness, and listed potency.
- Store in a cool dry place.
If you have trouble swallowing this caplet, dissolve it in water for
approximately 15 minutes and drink it down.
**2006, National Osteoporosis Foundation, http://www.nof.org/osteoporosis/diseasefacts.htm.
|
Calcium Citrate and Vitamin D |
| 180 Rapid Disintegration Vegetable Caplets |
$14.95 |
|
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