Vitamin D and Calcium
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Transcript Vitamin D and Calcium
Nutrients that prevent Cancer
Vitamin D
Fat-soluble vitamin
Sources
Foods
○ Naturally found in very few foods
○ Added to many foods on the market
Supplements
Sunlight
Vitamin D
Daily Recommended Intake
Current minimum intake recommendations
○ Birth-50 years = 200 IU
○ 51-70 years = 400 IU
○ 71+ years = 600 IU
Currently being debated
Food Sources of Vitamin D
3 oz smoked salmon = 583 IU
3 oz light tuna, canned in oil = 229 IU
1 large, whole egg = 29 IU
Foods Fortified with Vitamin D
8 oz skim milk = 115 IU
8 oz orange juice = 100 IU
1 cup Cheerios = 40 IU
½ cup yogurt = 40 IU
Calcium
Essential mineral
Daily Recommended Intakes
9-18 years = 1300 mg
19-50 years = 1000 mg
51 years and older =1200 mg
Calcium
Sources in the diet
Milk
Yogurt
Cheese
Dark green vegetables
Fortified sources
Cereals
Bread
Orange Juice
Calcium content of foods
8 oz milk = 300 mg
8 oz low-fat yogurt= 230 mg
½ cup cooked Spinach = 120 mg
1 cup Cheerios = 100 mg
Dietary Supplements
Calcium
Carbonate or
citrate
Dose dependent
absorption
Two doses per
day
Vitamin D
D2 or D3
D3 is best
A single serving = 1 cup
1 serving has 100 calories
10% Daily Value of calcium
1000mg * 0.10 = 100mg
10% Daily Value of vitamin D
400IU * 0.10 = 40 IU
http://www.fda.gov
Vitamin D Functions
Many uses in the body
Promotes absorption of calcium from the small
intestine
Maintain blood levels of calcium and phosphate
for bone formation, mineralization, growth, and
repair
Improves muscle strength and immune function
Reduces inflammation
Vitamin D Deficiency
At risk populations
Breastfed infants
Older adults
People with limited sun exposure
Darker skin pigments
Certain religious groups
Vitamin D Related Diseases
Rickets
Osteomalacia
Osteoporosis
Calcium Functions
Major component of bones and teeth
A small amount of calcium circulates in the
blood
Essential for clotting of the blood
Aids in the normal functioning of the nerves,
muscles, and heart
Calcium Deficiency
At risk populations
Children and youth
Post-menopausal women
Elderly
People with poor diets, lacking in dairy foods
Vitamin D and Cancer
Roles in prevention of
Colon cancer
Breast cancer
Vitamin D and Cancer
How it prevents
Promotes cellular differentiation
Decreases cancer cell growth
Stimulates cell deaths
Vitamin D Cancer Research
Mostly observational studies, only show
correlation
Food frequency questionnaires
Interviews
Diet records
Vitamin D & Colon Cancer
Research
Third National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey
Epidemiologic study
16,818 participants
Examined blood levels of vitamin D
Results
○ Blood levels 80nmol/L or higher reduced risk
by 72%
Vitamin D Cancer Research
American Cancer Society’s Cancer
Prevention Study II Nutrition Cohort
Studied 120,000 men and women
Analyzed diet, medical history, and lifestyle
Results
○ Men with intakes of 520 IU or higher from both
diet and supplementation slightly lowered risk
○ No effect in women
Vitamin D & Breast Cancer
Research
Cancer Prevention Study II Nutrition
Cohort
Participants
○ 68,567 postmenopausal women
Completed questionnaire on dietary intake,
family history, and supplement use
Results
○ Women who consumed higher amounts of
vitamin D and calcium from dairy products
reduced their risk of breast cancer
True or False.
Vitamin D is not necessary
for Calcium to be absorbed
in the body.
True or False.
Vitamin D is not necessary
for Calcium to be absorbed
by the body.
Calcium and Cancer
Roles in prevention of:
Colon cancer
Breast cancer
○ Premenopausal women
Calcium and Cancer
How it prevents cancer
Exact mechanism is unclear
Biochemical level
○ Calcium binds to bile acids and fatty acids in
the gastrointestinal tract to form insoluble
complexes
○ Reduces the ability of the acids to damage
cells in the lining of the colon and act directly
in reducing cell proliferation in the lining of the
colon
Calcium and Colon Cancer
Research
Nurses’ Health Study and Health
Professionals Follow-up study
Analyzed 135,000 men and women
Results
○ People who consumed 700mg or more per
day reduced risk by 35-45%
○ Effect was only recognized in distal area of
colon
Calcium & Colon Cancer
Research
National Institutes of Health-American
Association of Retired Persons Diet and
Health Study
Results
○ High intakes of total calcium, dietary calcium,
and calcium supplements lowered the risk of
colon cancer
20% among men
30% among women
Calcium & Colon Cancer
Research
Study in Iowa
34,000 women participated
Two groups
○ Intakes of 1280mg or more per day
○ Intakes of 800mg or less per day
Calcium intake from both diet and
supplements
Results
○ 41% reduction in colon cancer risk associated
with higher intake
Calcium and Breast Cancer
Prevention
Nurses’ Health Study
3,000 women
Calcium intakes 800 mg or more per day
○ Particularly from dairy products
Low-fat or non-fat milk
Yogurt
Cheese
Compared to intakes of 200 mg or less from
dairy
Results
○ Reduced risk in premenopausal women but NOT
postmenopausal.
Calcium and Breast Cancer
Prevention
Women’s Health Study
30,000 women
Two groups:
○ Intakes1366mg or more per day
○ Intakes less than 617mg per day
Results
○ Reduced risk in increased intake of calcium
○ Only in premenopausal women
What have we learned?
Vitamin D and calcium both plays roles
in preventing cancer
The recommended intakes
Calcium = 1000mg
Vitamin D = 400 IU
Many ways to increase intake
Change diet
Include supplements