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High Calcium, Vitamin D Intake May Harm Aging Brain


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Payne and her associates believe the link may lie in an excess absorption of calcium by blood vessel walls. These could form bone-like deposits that narrow blood vessels and restrict elasticity. Excess vitamin D might exacerbate that process, they added.

In turn, blood vessel damage, if it were to occur in the brain, could lead to the development of brain lesions, they theorized.

Given that "higher intakes of calcium and vitamin D have been promoted in recent years as a way to prevent bone loss with aging", Payne said that more in-depth study is urgently needed to further test such possible explanations for the observed vitamin-lesion link.

Text Continues Below



But Harris said that no one should be unduly alarmed by the current findings, at least for the time being.

"You wouldn't want to change your intake of calcium and vitamin D based on this study," she advised. "It may generate some hypotheses that are worth testing, but at this point the research can't really speak to whether the brain lesions were related to the calcium, vitamin D, or some other factor that people with high intakes of calcium and vitamin D also have."

More information

For additional information on calcium and vitamin D, visit the National Osteoporosis Foundation.

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Copyright © 2007 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 5/1/2007

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SOURCES: Martha E. Payne, PhD, assistant professor, department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, neuropsychiatric imaging research laboratory, Duke University, Durham, N.C.; Susan Harris, D.Sc., nutritional epidemiologist, scientist, USDA Nutrition Center, Tuft University, Boston; May 1, 2007, presentation, Experimental Biology 2007, Washington, D.C.


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