Calcium supplements may damage the heart
Date:
October 11, 2016
Source:
Johns Hopkins Medicine
Summary:
Taking
calcium in the form of supplements may raise the risk of plaque buildup in
arteries and heart damage, although a diet high in calcium-rich foods appears
be protective, say researchers at conclusion of their study that analyzed 10
years of medical tests on more than 2,700 people.
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More than half of women over 60 take calcium
supplements -- many without the oversight of a physician -- because they
believe it will reduce their risk of osteoporosis, researchers estimate.
After analyzing 10 years of medical
tests on more than 2,700 people in a federally funded heart disease study,
researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine and elsewhere conclude that taking
calcium in the form of supplements may raise the risk of plaque buildup in
arteries and heart damage, although a diet high in calcium-rich foods appears
be protective.
In a report on the research,
published Oct. 10 in the Journal of the American Heart Association,
the researchers caution that their work only documents an association between
calcium supplements and atherosclerosis, and does not prove cause and effect.
But they say the results add to
growing scientific concerns about the potential harms of supplements, and they
urge a consultation with a knowledgeable physician before using calcium
supplements. An estimated 43 percent of American adult men and women take a supplement
that includes calcium, according the National Institutes of Health.
"When it comes to using vitamin
and mineral supplements, particularly calcium supplements being taken for bone
health, many Americans think that more is always better," says Erin Michos,
M.D., M.H.S., associate director of preventive cardiology and associate
professor of medicine at the Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Heart
Disease at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "But our study
adds to the body of evidence that excess calcium in the form of supplements may
harm the heart and vascular system."
The researchers were motivated to
look at the effects of calcium on the heart and vascular system because studies
already showed that "ingested calcium supplements -- particularly in older
people -- don't make it to the skeleton or get completely excreted in the
urine, so they must be accumulating in the body's soft tissues," says
nutritionist John Anderson, Ph.D., professor emeritus of nutrition at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Gillings School of Global Public
Health and a co-author of the report. Scientists also knew that as a person
ages, calcium-based plaque builds up in the body's main blood vessel, the aorta
and other arteries, impeding blood flow and increasing the risk of heart
attack.
The investigators looked at detailed
information from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, a long-running
research project funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, which
included more than 6,000 people seen at six research universities, including
Johns Hopkins. Their study focused on 2,742 of these participants who completed
dietary questionnaires and two CT scans spanning 10 years apart.
The participants chosen for this
study ranged in age from 45 to 84, and 51 percent were female. Forty-one
percent were white, 26 percent were African-American, 22 percent were Hispanic
and 12 percent were Chinese. At the study's onset in 2000, all participants
answered a 120-part questionnaire about their dietary habits to determine how
much calcium they took in by eating dairy products; leafy greens;
calcium-enriched foods, like cereals; and other calcium-rich foods. Separately,
the researchers inventoried what drugs and supplements each participant took on
a daily basis. The investigators used cardiac CT scans to measure participants'
coronary artery calcium scores, a measure of calcification in the heart's
arteries and a marker of heart disease risk when the score is above zero.
Initially, 1,175 participants showed plaque in their heart arteries. The
coronary artery calcium tests were repeated 10 years later to assess newly
developing or worsening coronary heart disease.
For the analysis, the researchers
first split the participants into five groups based on their total calcium
intake, including both calcium supplements and dietary calcium. After adjusting
the data for age, sex, race, exercise, smoking, income, education, weight,
smoking, drinking, blood pressure, blood sugar and family medical history, the
researchers separated out 20 percent of participants with the highest total
calcium intake, which was greater than 1,400 milligrams of calcium a day. That
group was found to be on average 27 percent less likely than the 20 percent of
participants with the lowest calcium intake -- less than 400 milligrams of
daily calcium -- to develop heart disease, as indicated by their coronary
artery calcium test.
Next, the investigators focused on
the differences among those taking in only dietary calcium and those using calcium
supplements. Forty-six percent of their study population used calcium
supplements.
The researchers again accounted for
the same demographic and lifestyle factors that could influence heart disease
risk, as in the previous analysis, and found that supplement users showed a 22
percent increased likelihood of having their coronary artery calcium scores
rise higher than zero over the decade, indicating development of heart disease.
"There is clearly something
different in how the body uses and responds to supplements versus intake
through diet that makes it riskier," says Anderson. "It could be that
supplements contain calcium salts, or it could be from taking a large dose all
at once that the body is unable to process."
Among participants with highest dietary
intake of calcium -- over 1,022 milligrams per day -- there was no increase in
relative risk of developing heart disease over the 10-year study period.
"Based on this evidence, we can
tell our patients that there doesn't seem to be any harm in eating a
heart-healthy diet that includes calcium-rich foods, and it may even be
beneficial for the heart," says Michos. "But patients should really
discuss any plan to take calcium supplements with their doctor to sort out a
proper dosage or whether they even need them."
According to the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, coronary heart disease kills over 370,000
people each year in the U.S. More than half of women over 60 take calcium
supplements -- many without the oversight of a physician -- because they
believe it will reduce their risk of osteoporosis.
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