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You're Getting Enough Calcium By
Dr. Al
Sears
Calcium
is everywhere these days. It’s hard to get away from it even if you
try. They
put it in bread, milk, orange juice, pasta, yogurt, toothpaste, chewing
gum,
snack crackers and granola bars – it’s even in your water, depending on
where
you live.
But
supplementing with even more calcium is not a good idea.
A
review
done by the British Medical Journal carefully
analyzed 11 different
calcium supplementation studies. The BMJ found that
taking more than 500
mg a day increased heart attacks by 31 percent.1
Those
supplementing with calcium were also more likely to have more than one
heart
attack.
Another
study looked at 1,471 women over five years. Half took 1 gram of
calcium a day,
and half took a placebo.2
The
women
assigned to take calcium supplements were more than twice as likely to
have
heart attacks compared with those who took a placebo.
The
U.S.
Dept. of Agriculture found that most Americans take in around 800 mg of
calcium
every day. Fortunately, that’s about how much you need if you’re a
healthy
adult.
And
as
long as you eat anywhere near a normal diet, you don’t need calcium
supplements. You get plenty of calcium through the food you eat.
My
favorite way to get my daily dose is to eat lots of dark green leafy
vegetables
such as mustard greens and broccoli.
Some
other good sources of calcium are:
Also,
I
like to use spices when I cook, and two very flavorful spices in their
powdered
form – curry (645 mg) and mustard (335 mg) – are loaded with calcium.
To
make
sure you retain the calcium you take in, try to get 400 mg a day of
magnesium.
It works in your bones to balance your calcium. To Your Good Health,
Note: The good folks at the FTC
require me to disclose that I am an affiliate of the companies that |
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Health Supplements and You 2011