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Calcium
Helps Girls Keep the Weight Off
Excerpt By Steven
Reinberg,
HealthScoutNews
Whether calcium comes from dairy products or supplements, girls
who consume the highest levels weigh less than girls who consume
lower levels, a new study says.
"Dairy and calcium intake
is associated with the level of fat and weight among adolescent
girls," says lead author Rachel Novotny, a nutritionist at
the University of Hawaii. Similar findings have been found in
animals, adults and in very young children, but this is the first
time it has been found in young girls, she adds. These findings
support the idea that calcium, especially from dairy products,
helps control weight and fat.
Novotny and her colleagues from
the University of Hawaii at Manoa in Honolulu studied 323 girls,
aged 9 to 14 years old. The researchers collected data on what
the girls ate and their amount of physical exercise. They also
measured the girls' weight and the amount of fat just above the
hipbone near the bellybutton. This so-called "skin fold thickness"
measures abdominal fat.
Naturally, the girls who consumed
the most calories and did the least physical exercise weighed
more and had more body fat. However, after Novotny's team looked
at calcium intake, they found that despite differences in calorie
intake and amount of exercise, girls who consumed more calcium
weighed less than girls who consumed less calcium.
In fact, the investigators found
that as little as a daily increase of one cup of milk or a small
piece of cheese, about 300 milligrams of calcium, resulted in
one-half inch less of abdominal fat and as much as two pounds
less of body weight. "I have reason to believe that the same
effect occurs in boys," Novotny says.
Novotny presented her findings
on April 13 as part of the American Society for Nutritional Sciences
program at the Experimental Biology meeting in San Diego.
Over the past several decades,
the consumption of dairy foods in the United States has decreased,
Novotny says. "This may be contributing to our high levels
of obesity. These findings could have a measurable impact on levels
of weight," she adds.
People should be encouraged to
add more dairy to their diet, which will help them control weight
throughout their lives, Novotny says.
"This study presents exciting
results that adds to the previously published literature on the
effects of higher calcium or dairy intake on body composition,
particularly fat mass," says Dorothy Teegarden, a professor
of nutrition at Purdue University.
She adds the result of this study
provides further evidence that higher calcium intake may play
an important role in reducing the growing problem of obesity in
the United States, particularly in children.
However, Dr. Robert P. Heaney,
a professor of medicine and bone expert from Creighton University,
cautions that while high calcium intake can help, "nothing
will help you if you eat too much."
More information
Learn about calcium intake from
the American
Dietetic Association and the American
Academy of Pediatrics.
Reference
Source 101
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