Paper
Calcium and vitamin D in the management of osteoporosis
Published 2021 · M. Mendes, S. Sahni
UNKNOWN SJR score
2
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0
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Abstract
Abstract hidden due to publisher request; this does not indicate any issues with the research. Click the full text link above to read the abstract and view the original source.
Study Snapshot
Higher calcium intake may reduce the risk of osteoporosis by slowing age-related bone loss, with stronger effects in postmenopausal women.
PopulationOlder adults (50-71 years)
Sample size24
MethodsObservational
OutcomesBody Mass Index projections
ResultsSocial networks mitigate obesity in older groups.
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References
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JAMA
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2017·38citations·M. Rahme et al.·Journal of Bone and Mineral Research
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Monthly high-dose vitamin D supplementation of 100 000 IU colecalciferol did not prevent falls or fractures in a healthy, ambulatory adult population.
2017·163citations·K. Khaw et al.·The lancet. Diabetes & endocrinology
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Dietary calcium intake and rate of bone loss in men
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2017·14citations·S. Bristow et al.·British Journal of Nutrition
British Journal of Nutrition
The influence of genetic susceptibility and calcium plus vitamin D supplementation on fracture risk.
Calcium and vitamin D supplementation reduces fracture risk in women with the lowest genetic predisposition to low bone mineral density.
2017·17citations·Youjin Wang et al.·The American journal of clinical nutrition
The American journal of clinical nutrition
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