MAHA, Neb. - Very active young women who took higher-than-recommended doses
of calcium and vitamin D supplements for eight weeks had fewer stress fractures
than women who were given dummy pills, a study of Naval recruits showed.
Cedar Summit Farm organic milk is seen in New Prague, Minn.
in this May 31, 2006 file photo. [AP]
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Experts called the results encouraging
and of interest to young female athletes as well as women in the military.
"What really surprised us is that calcium/vitamin D supplements made a
significant difference in such a short period of time," said lead researcher
Joan Lappe of Creighton University. "Frankly, we were not sure we would see any
statistically significant results in only eight weeks."
The study, funded by the Department of Defense, was presented recently at the
Orthopaedic Research Society's annual meeting in San Diego.
Stress fractures are the most common type of injury seen in military
trainees, particularly women, and are also prevalent in some athletes.
The body uses calcium to build and repair bones. Vitamin D helps the body
absorb calcium.
The Creighton University study found that women who took 2,000 milligrams of
calcium and 800 international units (IUs) of vitamin D daily had 27 percent
fewer stress fractures than those who didn't.
The government recommends 1,000 milligrams of calcium and 200 IUs of vitamin
D each day for women ages 19 to 50. However, young women generally don't get
enough of these important ingredients.
As many as one in five female military recruits is estimated to suffer from a
stress fracture, which forms when the bone doesn't have time to heal from
rigorous activity. Some can lead to chronic pain.
Roughly 3,700 women, ages 17 to 35, training at the Great Lakes Naval
Training Center in Great Lakes, Ill., participated in the full study. About half
were given supplements with the higher amounts of calcium and vitamin D over
their eight-week training periods. The other half took placebos. Fewer fractures
were reported among the women who took the supplements.
Lappe said 14,441 women trained at the Great Lakes center during the two
years the study was conducted. If all of them had been taking the supplements,
there would have been about 260 fewer female recruits with stress fractures, she
said.
Dr. Murray J. Favus, the director of the University of Chicago's bone program
who often sees stress fractures among young, active women, said the findings
were the first to show how such injuries can be reduced.
The study "clearly demonstrates that a simple intervention using calcium and
vitamin D have significant benefits in reducing the rates of stress fractures.
This is very encouraging," he said.
Favus and Lappe both suggested the study would have implications for people
outside the military.
Lappe noted that high school athletes, particularly those who participate in
track and field, are at high risk for stress fractures. It's likely, she said,
that they would suffer fewer of those injuries with higher levels of calcium and
vitamin D in their diets.