Approximately 1000 mg of calcium is ingested daily in the diet. About 800 mg appears in the stool from unabsorbed dietary calcium and intestinal secretion) and 200 mg in the urine. The percentage of dietary calcium absorbed increases or decreases, influenced by dietary intake and the adaptive effects of vitamin D and parathyroid hormone.

The recommended daily allowance (RDA) is 700 to 800 mg (0.7 to 0.8 g) per day. Some people remain in balance on lower intakes. The WHO recommends only 400 to 500 mg per day for adults. Because of increased calcium excretion higher in high protein diets, a higher calcium intake is recommended. For pregnant and lactating women, 1200 mg daily is advised; and 1200 to 1500 mg for women over 50.

After age 40, the calcium requirement increases as the efficiency of intestinal calcium absorption progressively declines. Postmenopausal women and most elderly men must increase their intake 50% to adapt to changing needs and to avoid negative balance.

Calcium is found almost exclusively in three classes of foods - milk and milk products, green vegetables, and a some fish and shellfish. In terms of calcium per 100 kcalories, green vegetables seem to be an excellent source. However, there is an uncertainty as to its absorption from green vegetables.

Milk is an excellent source, because of its calcium absorbability. However, to obtain 1500 mg of calcium from milk, it will require an intake of more than 5 cups, providing about 90 calories per cup of nonfat milk - or 450 calories per day. Alas, to the calorie-counting dieter.


DIETARY CALCIUM SOURCES
FOODS RANKED BY CALCIUM PER SERVING AND CALCIUM PER 100 KCALORIES
CORAL CALCIUM
CALCIUM SUPPLEMENTS AND BIOAVAILABILITY: THE ACID TEST
VEGETABLES HIGHEST IN CALCIUM
VEGANS DON'T NEED DAIRY FOR GOOD BONE HEALTH

D  I  E  T A  R  Y     S  O  U  R  C  E  S
A Simplified Comparative Table
Source Calcium (mg)
Milk (1 cup)  
Non-fat 302
Low-fat, 2% 297
Whole, 3.3% 291
Buttermilk 285
Cheese (1 oz)  
Swiss 273
Cheddar 205
Mozarella, skim 183
American 163
Blue 150
Cottage, low-fat (1.2 cup) 77
Yogurt, Plain (8 oz)  
Nonfat 452
Low-fat 415
Whole 274
Frozen Desserts, Vanilla (1 cup)  
Yogurt 249
Ice cream 176
Ice milk 176
Seafood (oz)  
Sardines, with bones (4) 496
Salmon, pink, canned (6) 333
Oysters, fresh, raw (8) 213
Shrimp, canned (3) 96
Lobster (3) 55
Nuts (cup)  
Almonds (1/2) 152
Brazil (1/2) 130
Peanuts (1/2) 104
Vegetables (cup)  
Mustard greens (1) 193
Okra (1) 147
Broccoli (1) 136
Turnip greens, raw (1/2) 126

FOOD ITEMS

Calcium
per serving (mg)

KCalories
per serving
 

Calcium per
100 KCal (mg)

Sardines, canned w/ bones

371

175

 212
Kefir - 1 cup

350

160

 219
Goat milk - 1 ciup

326

168

 195
Shrimp. boiled - 3.5 oz

320

109

 294
Non-fat milk + solids - 1 cup

316

91

 347
1% milk + solids - 1 cup

314

105

 299
Romano cheese - 1 cup

302

110

 275
Nonfat milk or yogurt

302

86

 351
1% low fat milk - 1 cup

300

102

 294
Whole milk - 1 cup

291

150

 195
Buttermilk - 1 cup

285

99

 288
Chocolate milk, while - 1 cup

280

210

 133
Swiss cheese - 1 oz

272

107

 254
Spinac h, canned - 1 cup

271

50

 542
Spinach, cooked - 1 cup

244

41

 595
Cheddar cheese - 1 oz

204

114

 179
Munster cheese - 1 oz

203

104

 195
Oysters, raw - 1 cup

202

160

 126
Turnip greens, cooked - 1 cup

198

29

 683
Broccoli, cooked - 1 cup

178

146

 387
Salmon, canned, with bones - 3 oz

167

120

 139
Beet greens, cooked, 1 cup

165

40

 413
Bok choy, cabbage, cooked - 1 cup

158

20

  790
Cottage cheese, lowfat, 2 % - 1 cup

155

205

 76
Dandelion greens, cooked, 1 cup

147

35

 420
Soy beans, cooked dry - 1 cup

132

235

 56
Collards, cooked - 1 cup

113

20

 165
Tofu soybean curd - 1 block

108

86

 126
Mustard greens, cooked - 1 cup

104

21

 542
Parsley, chopped fresh - 1 cup

78

20

 390
Almonds, whole dried -1 cup

75

167

 45
Kidney beans, canned - 1 cup

74

230

 32
Parmesan cheese - 1 tbsp

69

23

 300
Green beans, cooked - 1 cup

58

44

 132
Spinach, fresh chopped - 1 cup

55

12

 542
Okra pods, fresh-cooked - 8

54

27

 200
Orange, fresh medium - 1

52

60

 87
Summer squash, cooked - 1 cup

48

36

 133
Seaweed, kelp, raw - 1 oz

48

12

 400
Looseleaf lettuce - 1 cup

38

10

 380
Caulifower, cooked - 1 cup

34

30

 113
Cabbage, raw shredded - 1 cup

32

16

 200
Cantaloupe, melon - 1/8

29

94

 31
Sirloin steak, lean - 8 oz

26

480

 5
Whole wheat bread - 1 slice

20

70

 31
Oatmeal, cooked - 1 cup

20

145

 14
Peanuts, dried unsalted - 1 oz

17

161

 11
Celery, outer stalk - 1

14

6

 233
Sole/flounder, baked - 3 oz

13

120

 11
Chicken breast, roassted - 1/2

13

142

 9
Apple, fresh medium - 1

10

80

 13

10 VEGETABLES HIGHEST
IN CALCIUM
Per 100g Serving  
Collard greens
210 mg
357 mg / cup chopped
Kale, raw 205 mg 137 mg / cup
Green turnips 190 mg 105 mg / cup chopped
Garlic 181 mg 246 mg/ cup • 5 mg / clove
Argula 160 mg 32 mg / cup
Broccoli Rabe (Rapini) 118 mg 516 mg / bunch, cooked
Sun dried tomatoes 110 mg 59 mg / cup
Mustard greesn 101 mg 152 mg / cup chopped
Spinach, raw 99 mg 30 mg / cup
Okra 96 mg 177 mg / cup, sliced
Other calcium rich vegetables: Raw broccoli, fireweed leaves, grape leaves (canned), amaranth greens, jute (meloukhia), seaweed (kelp), nopales, wasabi root, garden cress, endive, Swiss chard, cabbage, rutabagas (cooked), butternut squash, celtuce, sweet potatoes, shallots, Brussels sprouts, lettuce, parsnips (raw). source

CORAL CALCIUM
There is a recent calcium supplement craze, feeding off osteoporosis fears. It is Coral Calcium, label-embellished with "mariine-grade, above-sea" and "superior to below-sea coral" with experts and proponents from both coral sea-levels flooding the cyberspace search engines.

Calcium is an essential mineral, and coral calcium (calcium carbonate) is one form of its many sources. To date, there has not been any studies proving superioriry of coral calcium to other forms of calcium supplements.

Two debunking website articles: "Coral Calcium debunked" and "Coral Calcium: The Joke's On You."

CALCIUM SUPPLEMENTS DIFFER IN BIOAVAILABILITY, SIMPLE ACID TEST SHOWS
Calcium supplements differ in bioavailability. The stomach absorbs some better than others. Dr. Michael Hollick, director of the Bone Healthcare Clinic at the Boston Medical Center, suggested a simple test to gauge the ability of the stomach for calcium supplement absorption. Mix the calcium preparation in white vinegar. In 20 minutes, if it hasn't dissolved in white vinegar, it's not likely to dissolve in your stomach either.

VEGANS DON'T NEED DAIRY FOR GOOD BONE HEALTHDespite the vegan's dairy-free diet, they are in surprisingly good bone health. A study by Heather Hinkley, Ph.d and colleagues of the British College of Osteopathic Medicine in London, was done on 20-40 year-old women, followed for a minimum of 5 years, evaluated with broadband ultrasound attenuation of the calcaneum for bone mineral density assessment. There was no age-related decline in ultrasound attenuation among vegans. There was no statistical diffrerence between vegans and omnivores. The researchers speculate that a vegan diet may actually benefit bone health. 60% of vegans took calcium supplements which mave have contributed to the increased bone density. Also, the lack of dietary animal protein may be beneficial to the acid-base balance, with resulting less movement of bone mineral and decreased calcium excretion with preservation of bone integrity.


Sources
Calcium Supplements Differ in Bioavailability, Simple Acid Test Shows. Colin Nelson. Internal Med News. Aug 2005
Understanding Normal & Clinical Nutrition. Whitney, Cataldo, Rolfes. 2nd Ed. West Publishing Co. 1996
Cecil Textbook of Medicine. Wyngaarden and Smith. WB Saunders. 18th Ed.
Vegans Don't Need Dairy for Good Bone Health. Internal Medicine News. December 1, 2007
Top 10 Vegetables Highest in Calcium / HealthAliciousNess


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