Calcium In Early Life Prevents Osteoporosis

corrective 5

Table of Contents

Calcium In Early Life Prevents Osteoporosis

During an 18-day trial involving newborn pigs, researchers found markedly lower levels of bone density and strength in pigs fed a calcium-deficient diet, compared to pigs that received more calcium. When researchers looked at certain stem cells in bone marrow, they found many of these cells in the calcium-deficient pigs appeared to have already been programmed to become fat cells, instead of bone-forming cells. Because these programmed mesenchymal stem cells replicate to provide all the bone-forming cells for an animal\’s entire life, very early calcium deficiency may have predisposed the pigs to have bones that contain more fat and less mineral, possibly making those pigs more prone to osteoporosis and obesity in later life. This suggests that calcium nutrition of the neonate may be more important to lifelong bone health and osteoporosis prevention, due to its programming effects on mesenchymal stem cells. Health professionals may want to think about osteoporosis not as a disease of the elderly, but as a pediatric disease with later onset. The big message is that calcium nutrition, or mineral nutrition as a whole, needs to be a priority from day one. North Carolina State University, May 2010

Neuropathy

Neuropathy Relief: Combining Infrared Therapy and Nutrition

Posted on June 6, 2025 Tired of tingling feet keeping you from enjoying Austin’s Barton Springs or dancing at The Broken Spoke? At Corrective Health, ...
Read More
Achieving a Healthy Weight

Chiropractic Care for Weight Loss: How Spinal Health Impacts Metabolism

Posted on May 30, 2025 Struggling to shed those extra pounds despite dieting and exercise? The problem might not just be your calorie count—it could ...
Read More
Uncategorized

7-Day Leaky Gut Diet: Kickstart Your Healing Journey

7-Day Leaky Gut Diet: Kickstart Your Healing Journey Posted on May 23, 2025 Are you battling bloating, fatigue, or mysterious food sensitivities? These could signal ...
Read More
Scroll to Top