Guest guest Posted January 10, 2001 Report Share Posted January 10, 2001 Patsy, I posted a few articles yesterday about calcium's role in regulating blood pressure. Another very important regulator of BP is water. It's been awhile since I have preached about the importance of drinking water. I never used to drink it until I started reading about the health benefits. As many meds as we are all on, it should be easy to guzzle down an 8 ounce glass of water every time we take a pill. I feel nutrition plays a major roll on many health issues. Calcium is very important, but remember that you need to have adequate vitamin D as well to properly metabolize the calcium. Vitamin D causes bone resorption. Without bone resorption, the calcium goes down the toilet. Estrogen deficiency (amenorrhea), vitamin D deficiencies, smoking, and medications also have an effect on calcium. Smoking stimulates the conversion of estrogen to an inactive form. Woman who smoke heavily may benefit less from the protective effects of estrogen replacement therapy. Calcium citrate is absorbed more efficiently than other calcium salts, yet even older individuals with low gastric acid content can sufficiently absorb this element due to the acidity of other foods. Calcium carbonate (ie, calcium source in TUMS) has the highest percentage of elemental calcium and is one of the most commonly used dietary supplements. Steroids (oral, parenteral, or high-dose inhaled) increase the kidney's excretion of calcium and decrease intestinal absorption of calcium. As calcium levels drop, parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels rise, increasing bone resorption. As little as 7.5mg of oral steroids/day can result in bone loss. Even at stable or slightly increasing steroid doses, bone loss appears to be highest during the first 3 months of steroid treatment, and plateaus at 6 months. Studies show that patients on 35mg to 50mg of prednisone every 2 days have 17% bone loss per year. I hope everyone that must take steroids also takes Fosamax to help stop the bone loss. This Medscape article is a very good one. Registration is required at Medscape, but it is free. Clinical Essentials of Calcium and Skeletal Disorders http://primarycare.medscape.com/PCI/calcium/public/calcium-about.html a ----- Original Message ----- From: Patsy3 <Patsy3@...> < egroups> Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2001 10:55 PM Subject: RE: [ ] Re: Prednisone & Smoking > Hi, > > Regarding calcium: I look for calcium capsules (sp), or the candy calcium > which dissolves almost immediately. > > I had an interesting experience recently with -- or rather without -- > calcium. My blood pressure went way up. I don't have a problem with blood > pressure unless I have been in a traumatic accident of some sort, and > nothing was unusual in my life other than coping with RA and Fibro. I tried > to figure out anything that was different and remembered I had been out of > calcium for two or three weeks. I went immediately to buy calcium and > within 10 days or so I was back in the normal blood pressure range. I had > read that calcium helps control blood pressure, but I had forgotten about > it. My mother has been on blood pressure medicine for years, and maybe if I > did not take calcium daily I would too! > > Thanks for listening! > > Patsy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2001 Report Share Posted January 11, 2001 Dear a, Thanks for the infor on calcium. I do take calcium with vitamin D even though I probably get plenty of D from the sun here in CA. I just know it was amazing how much my blood pressure jumped without calcium for awhile. Someone on this forum mentioned having a kidney stone that was possibly caused by too much calcium. I just pray I never set my self up for that problem with my calcium supplements. Patsy -----Original Message----- From: a [mailto:aA@...] Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2001 8:21 AM egroups Subject: Re: [ ] Re: Prednisone & Smoking-calcium Patsy, I posted a few articles yesterday about calcium's role in regulating blood pressure. Another very important regulator of BP is water. It's been awhile since I have preached about the importance of drinking water. I never used to drink it until I started reading about the health benefits. As many meds as we are all on, it should be easy to guzzle down an 8 ounce glass of water every time we take a pill. I feel nutrition plays a major roll on many health issues. Calcium is very important, but remember that you need to have adequate vitamin D as well to properly metabolize the calcium. Vitamin D causes bone resorption. Without bone resorption, the calcium goes down the toilet. Estrogen deficiency (amenorrhea), vitamin D deficiencies, smoking, and medications also have an effect on calcium. Smoking stimulates the conversion of estrogen to an inactive form. Woman who smoke heavily may benefit less from the protective effects of estrogen replacement therapy. Calcium citrate is absorbed more efficiently than other calcium salts, yet even older individuals with low gastric acid content can sufficiently absorb this element due to the acidity of other foods. Calcium carbonate (ie, calcium source in TUMS) has the highest percentage of elemental calcium and is one of the most commonly used dietary supplements. Steroids (oral, parenteral, or high-dose inhaled) increase the kidney's excretion of calcium and decrease intestinal absorption of calcium. As calcium levels drop, parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels rise, increasing bone resorption. As little as 7.5mg of oral steroids/day can result in bone loss. Even at stable or slightly increasing steroid doses, bone loss appears to be highest during the first 3 months of steroid treatment, and plateaus at 6 months. Studies show that patients on 35mg to 50mg of prednisone every 2 days have 17% bone loss per year. I hope everyone that must take steroids also takes Fosamax to help stop the bone loss. This Medscape article is a very good one. Registration is required at Medscape, but it is free. Clinical Essentials of Calcium and Skeletal Disorders http://primarycare.medscape.com/PCI/calcium/public/calcium-about.html a ----- Original Message ----- From: Patsy3 <Patsy3@...> < egroups> Sent: Tuesday, January 09, 2001 10:55 PM Subject: RE: [ ] Re: Prednisone & Smoking > Hi, > > Regarding calcium: I look for calcium capsules (sp), or the candy calcium > which dissolves almost immediately. > > I had an interesting experience recently with -- or rather without -- > calcium. My blood pressure went way up. I don't have a problem with blood > pressure unless I have been in a traumatic accident of some sort, and > nothing was unusual in my life other than coping with RA and Fibro. I tried > to figure out anything that was different and remembered I had been out of > calcium for two or three weeks. I went immediately to buy calcium and > within 10 days or so I was back in the normal blood pressure range. I had > read that calcium helps control blood pressure, but I had forgotten about > it. My mother has been on blood pressure medicine for years, and maybe if I > did not take calcium daily I would too! > > Thanks for listening! > > Patsy Chat room: chat/ Web pages for our group: http://rheumatoid.arthritis.freehosting.net/ http://www.rasupport.webprovider.com/ Change subscription options: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.