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Calcium Mechanism for Weight Loss Gets Clinical Support
| Calcium
could reduce body weight by binding fat in the intestine and increasing
its excretion from the body, say Danish researchers, who have provided
the first clinical evidence to support a mechanism for the weight loss
effect of dairy produce. Several epidemiological studies in recent years have showed an inverse relationship between calcium intake and body weight. In 2002, a US team reported that a high calcium diet resulted in greater weight and fat loss in obese adults on a low-calorie diet than in those on a low calcium diet. |
Researchers have
suggested some possible mechanisms for this effect but there has been little
evidence so far to support the observational findings.
The new study, published in the March issue of the International Journal of
Obesity (vol 29, no 3, pp 292-301), shows that fat excreted in the feces increased
2.5-fold in people on a high calcium diet compared with when they lowered
their calcium intake.
Lead author Professor Arne Astrup at the Royal Veterinary and Agricultural
University in Denmark says that this mechanism could be enough to explain
a 4 kilo drop in weight over a year.
“I had this hypothesis that calcium could bind fat in the GI tract and
had to find out if it could affect weight through fecal fat excretion. But
it surprised us that it was so much,” he told NutraIngredients.com.
A short-term boost in dietary calcium increased fecal fat and energy excretion
by around 350 kJ per day.
“This is a very solid finding and seen across all of the subjects,”
added Professor Astrup.
The researchers set up a trial that tightly controlled the diets and energy
expenditure of 10 healthy, moderately overweight volunteers. The randomized
crossover study tested three diets with different calcium and protein levels,
mainly from low-fat dairy products.
These were low calcium (500 mg) and normal protein (making up 15 per cent
of energy), high calcium (1800 mg) and normal protein and high calcium and
high protein (23 per cent of energy).
Calcium intake had no effect on 24-hour energy excretion or fat oxidation,
ruling out one previously suggested mechanism that the mineral could affect
the mineral’s role in fat metabolism by influencing fat's oxidation.
However, fecal fat excretion came to 14.2g per day for the high calcium, normal
protein diet, compared to 6 grams for the low calcium diet and 5.9 grams for
the low calcium, high protein diet.
The high calcium diet also increased fecal energy excretion as compared with
the other diets.
There were no effects on blood cholesterol, free fatty acids, triacylglycerol,
insulin, leptin, or thyroid hormones.
The findings are important because this is the first human intervention study
to support calcium’s fat-binding mechanism.
“The mechanism by which calcium increases fat excretion is probably
an interaction between calcium and fatty acids, resulting in the formation
of insoluble calcium fatty acid soaps and hence in reduced fat absorption,”
write the authors.
Professor Astrup noted, “We now have a very good explanation for this
effect on weight but there may be others. There could be an effect of calcium
on appetite but we wouldn’t have seen it as we controlled energy intake
among the subjects.”
Astrup’s team has begun working on further human trials to test the
mechanisms of calcium on weight loss.
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