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Calcium Citrate
 
large product photo   OVERVIEW & BENEFITS

Along with playing an essential role in the formation of bones and teeth, calcium is intimately involved in with many other vital body functions. It is essential to the transmission of nerve messages, the proper function of muscles including the heart, the activation of certain enzymes for digestion, the nourishment of cells, and the release of energy.

A debate has raged for decades among nutritional experts as to which form of calcium is beter absorbed by the human body. Now, study conducted by the Southwestern Medical Center at the University of Texas recently reported that calcium citrate has an absorbtion rate 2.5 faster than cacium carbonate when both types were combined with Vitamin D and Boron.

According to 'The Doctor's Vitamin and Mineral Encyclopedia" (Simon & Schuster, 1990) by Sheldon Hendler, M.D., Ph.D., calcium in the form of calcium citrate does not require stomach hydrochloric acid for absorption. This means that it is more readily absorbed and utilized by the body and can also be taken on an empty stomach.

Calcium citrate never leads to the formation of calcium kidney stones.

Another unique advantage that comes with taking calcium citrate is that unlike other forms of calcium, it never blocks iron absorption.

Additional Benefits of Calcium

The blood uses calcium for so many functions that if there is a dietary deficiency of calcium, and therefore a decreased amount of calcium in the bloodstream, the body pulls the calcium it needs from the bones. This, in addition to the natural mineral loss, causes the bones to weaken and be dangerously susceptible to fractures, a serious condition termed osteoporosis. Other symptoms of calcium deficiency are muscle cramps, nervousness, increased cholesterol levels, insomnia, and numbness in and/or legs.

In 1994, the National Institute of Health reported that Recommended Daily Allowance, 800 mg, for calcium is too low, and that half of American adults are not getting enough calcium on a daily basis. They (NIH) recommend a dosage between 1,000 and 1,500 mg daily. Calcium expert Robert Heaney, M.D., of Creighton University believes that women need 1,500 mg of calcium a day-almost double the RDA. The average American diet fails to provide half of that amount.

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