High-Protein
Diet Won't
Weaken Your Bone
Excerpt
By Colette Bouchez,
HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Into the continuing debate over a high-protein
diet's link to bone health comes a new study showing that, when
coupled with adequate calcium and vitamin D, protein may actually
be good for your bones.
For years, scientists have theorized that a high-protein diet could
increase the risk of calcium loss.
But in research reported today in the American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition, doctors say elderly people who ate a diet
high in animal or vegetable protein and took calcium and
vitamin D supplements significantly increased their bone density.
They did better than either those on a low-protein diet who took
the same supplements or those who took no supplements at all.
"We assessed the protein intake of all the participants,
and divided them into three groups -- low, middle and high. And
our findings were that the higher the protein intake, the better
the bone density changes over a period of three years if you were
in the calcium-supplemented group," says study author Dr.
Beth Dawson-Hughes, a Tufts University scientist.
However, in the control group, the higher amounts of protein
had no such positive effect. In fact, Dawson-Hughes says, the
more protein consumed without benefit of calcium supplementation,
the greater the trend toward bone density loss, although that
loss was not considered significant.
She emphasizes that her research does not conclude that a high-protein
diet without calcium increases the risk of bone loss. Rather,
she says, it suggests the "possibility that consuming more
protein can be helpful to bone, as long as you're meeting the
calcium requirements."
For endocrinologist Dr. Loren Wissner Greene, the finding is
intriguing, partly because past research has shown that
high-protein diets can harm bone health, mostly by increasing
the rate of urinary calcium excretion and interfering with calcium
absorption in the intestines.
"But this study proposes the idea that even if protein
does have a negative effect on the bones, you can not only overcome
this by the addition of adequate calcium and vitamin D, but that
working synergistically, these nutrients may even cause the protein
to turn around and become a helpful component," she says.
The latest research, a randomized, placebo-controlled trial,
involved 342 healthy men and women over the age of 65. Each was
given either a supplement containing 500 milligrams of calcium
and adequate vitamin D for absorption or a placebo, which they
took daily for three years.
At the start of the study, and in six- months intervals throughout,
researchers measured the bone density of the participants, using
a system known as dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Measurements
were taken at various points in the body, including the neck and
the spine.
Midway through the study, researchers also gave out a questionnaire
to determine intake of both calcium-rich and high-protein foods.
Only at the conclusion of the study did the researchers find
out who was taking the calcium supplements and who was not. They
then tallied the food questionnaires to determine the amount of
protein each person was consuming, as well as their level of dietary
calcium.
From that they developed the following subgroups: low, medium
and high protein intake, with an average of 870 milligrams of
dietary calcium daily; and low, medium and high protein intake
with an average of 1,300 milligrams of calcium daily with adequate
vitamin D.
After adjusting for influences of age, sex, weight and total
calorie intake, they determined that all those on the high-protein
diet who took the calcium and vitamin D supplements saw positive
effects on bone health. Those who ate the most protein saw the
most dramatic effects, particularly in bone-density measurements
of the neck.
By comparison, those who had no vitamin/mineral supplementation
showed almost no positive changes in bone mass density, no matter
how much their protein intake increased.
In fact, says Dawson-Hughes, there was some evidence to show
that when higher amounts of protein were consumed without the
benefits of calcium and vitamin D, bone health suffered.
What's important to note, she adds, is that even in the group
consuming the greatest amount of protein, the level was not unusually
high, averaging about 96 grams a day. The recommended amount of
daily protein is between 40 grams and 60 grams daily.
For Wissner Greene, the message is that you can't go wrong if
you supplement your diet with calcium and vitamin D.
"No matter how much protein you eat, getting adequate calcium
and vitamin D will be healthy for your bones," she says.
What To Do
To learn more about bone health, visit The
British Nutrition Foundation.
For a fun test of your "Calcium IQ," visit The
Association of Reproductive Health Professionals.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
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