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Original Research Communications |
1 From the Department of Medicine, the University Hospital of Tromsø, and The Institute of Community Medicine, the University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway; and The Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, the University of Newcastle, Newcastle, Australia.
2 Supported by a grant from the Norwegian Research Council.
3 Address reprint requests to R Jorde, Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital of Tromsø, 9038 Tromsø, Norway. E-mail: medrj{at}rito.no.
| ABSTRACT |
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Objective: The objective was to evaluate the relation between calcium intake from dairy products and the intake of vitamin D on systolic and diastolic blood pressure.
Design: Subjects who were taking drugs for hypertension or heart disease, those taking calcium tablets, subjects reporting cardiovascular disease, and pregnant women were excluded, leaving 7543 men and 8053 women aged 2569 y for analysis. Calcium and vitamin D intakes were calculated from a food-frequency questionnaire.
Results: After correction for age, body mass index, alcohol and coffee consumption, physical activity, cigarette smoking, and vitamin D intake, there was a significant linear decrease in systolic and diastolic blood pressure with increasing dairy calcium intake in both sexes (P < 0.05). However, the difference in blood pressure between subjects with the highest and those with the lowest calcium intake was
13 mm Hg. Similarly, with increasing blood pressure there was a significant (P < 0.001) linear decrease in age-adjusted calcium intake from dairy sources; the difference between the highest and the lowest blood pressure groups was 310%. Vitamin D intake had no significant effect on blood pressure.
Conclusions: There is a negative association between calcium intake from dairy products and blood pressure. However, although the effect of calcium on blood pressure appears to be small, calcium could have a significant effect on primary prevention of cardiovascular diseases.
Key Words: Calcium intake vitamin D intake systolic blood pressure diastolic blood pressure hypertension milk intake Norway
| INTRODUCTION |
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In a health survey in Tromsø during 1994 and 1995, >27000 subjects were examined. The primary focus was on cardiovascular risk factors but subjects were also asked about consumption of milk, cheese, and yogurt, which are the main calcium sources in the Norwegian diet (12). The purpose of the present study was therefore to use this database to evaluate possible relations between intake of calcium from dairy sources and blood pressure. Because the absorption of calcium is highly dependent on vitamin D status (13), intake of vitamin D was also included in the analyses.
| SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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Questionnaires
The letter of invitation to participate in the study contained questions on cardiovascular diseases; number of cigarettes smoked daily; number of cups of coffee drunk daily; number of hours of moderate and hard weekly physical activity; number of glasses of beer, wine, and spirits (eg, vodka) drunk per 2 wk; and whether the subjects put butter on their bread. The participants brought the completed questionnaires with them to the examination, where the responses were checked for logistics. A physical activity score was calculated by adding the hours of moderate and hard physical activity together (giving the hours with hard activity double weight). An alcohol intake score was calculated by adding together the number of glasses of beer, wine, and spirits (assuming an equal amount of alcohol in one glass of each type).
A second questionnaire that included questions about medical history, pregnancy, past and present medication use, and dietary habits was filled out by the subjects at home and returned by mail. For subjects aged <70 y, the questionnaire on dietary habits included questions on the type of milk and number of glasses drunk daily, the number of slices of bread eaten daily and how many of these slices had a topping containing fatty fish (eg, mackerel or sardines) or different types of cheese, how many times weekly yogurt and egg (boiled or fried) were eaten, and how many times weekly fatty fish (eg, salmon) was eaten for dinner. Furthermore, the subjects were asked about their daily use of calcium and vitamin D tablets and cod liver oil supplementation.
Each portion of butter the subjects put on their bread was assumed to be 6 g, each glass of milk was assumed to be 150 mL, each topping with cheese was 10 g, each topping with fatty fish was 20 g, each portion of yogurt was 100 mL, each egg was 60 g, and the amount of fatty fish in a dinner portion was 200 g. These portions are usual Norwegian servings (15). Each tablet of vitamin D was assumed to contain 10 µg vitamin D and each portion of cod liver oil supplementation was assumed to be 10 mL. On the basis of a Norwegian food table (16), the daily intake of calcium from dairy products and daily intake of vitamin D were calculated (Table 1
). Unless otherwise specified, "calcium intake" throughout this article refers to intake from dairy sources.
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Statistical analyses
To enable main effects and interactions to be identified, the data were evaluated initially with a 3-factor analysis of variance (ANOVA) with sex, calcium intake, and vitamin D intake as fixed factors; systolic and diastolic blood pressure as dependent variables; and age, BMI, alcohol and coffee consumption, physical activity, and number of cigarettes smoked daily as independent variables. Associations were evaluated with Pearson correlation coefficients. Differences between men and women were evaluated with ANOVA. Linear trends were evaluated with linear regression. Comparisons of calcium intakes between subjects with and without hypertension were done with multiple linear regression, with calcium intake as a dependent variable; systolic or diastolic hypertension as fixed factor; and age, BMI, alcohol and coffee consumption, physical activity, number of cigarettes smoked daily, and daily intake of vitamin D as independent variables. Systolic hypertension was defined as systolic blood pressure
160 mm Hg, and diastolic hypertension was defined as diastolic blood pressure
100 mm Hg. All tests were done two-sided, and the Bonferroni correction was used as a post hoc test. Significance was set at P < 0.05. The data were analyzed with SPSS for WINDOWS, version 8.0 (SPSS Inc, Chicago).
| RESULTS |
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Main effects and interactions
The 3-factor ANOVA showed that the subject's sex had a significant effect on systolic and diastolic blood pressure (P < 0.001), whereas calcium intake had a significant effect only on diastolic blood pressure (P < 0.02). Intake of vitamin D had no significant effects on blood pressure. There were no significant 2- or 3-way interactions on blood pressure between the 3 fixed factors.
Effect of sex and age
Compared with women, men had significantly higher blood pressure; had higher intakes of calcium, vitamin D, coffee, and alcohol; were more physically active; and smoked more cigarettes (Table 1
and Table 2
). There was a significant linear increase in blood pressure and vitamin D intake with age in both sexes. There was a significant decrease in calcium intake with age in men. This was also seen in the women aged <50 y (Table 3
).
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| DISCUSSION |
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The recommended optimal calcium intake is 10001500 mg/d, depending on age and sex (17). We found a mean calcium intake from dairy sources ranging from 640 mg/d in young men to 430 mg/d in middle-aged women. Given that milk and dairy products are responsible for
75% of the calcium intake in a Norwegian diet (12), the total calcium intake in our study population was lower than the recommended intake. Calcium intake in our population was also lower than that reported from another Norwegian study, in which the total intake of calcium was 1.1 g in men and 0.9 g in women (18). Furthermore, total calcium intake in our study was slightly lower than that reported from a Belgian study by Kesteloot and Joossens (19) but similar to that found in a US study by McCarron et al (1). On the other hand, total calcium intake in our study was considerably higher than what was reported in Asian studies (9, 20), mainly because of the lower milk intakes in those populations.
As expected, most of the subjects had calcium intakes in the mid-range (200800 mg/d). However, 1500 subjects had intakes <200 mg/d and 2000 subjects had intakes >800 mg/d, making the distribution of calcium intake fairly wide. Furthermore, groups that could have confounding effects on the results (eg, subjects taking drugs for hypertension or heart disease, subjects reporting cardiovascular disease, and pregnant women) were not included. Finally, because we studied the effect of calcium from dairy sources only, subjects who were taking calcium supplements were excluded. Thus, our data likely show the effect of dairy calcium on blood pressure.
Indeed, we did find a negative association between calcium intake from dairy sources and blood pressure that was significant in the initial 3-factor ANOVA for diastolic blood pressure only. To make sure that the general analysis did not mask effects in subgroups, we also looked separately at blood pressure in relation to various calcium intake groups and calcium intake in relation to blood pressure groups. Using this approach, we found a significant linear decrease in blood pressure with increasing calcium intake. However, the differences in adjusted systolic or diastolic blood pressure between subjects with the highest and subjects with the lowest calcium intake were only 13 mm Hg. Furthermore, there was also a significant linear decrease in age-adjusted calcium intake with increasing systolic and diastolic blood pressure, with a difference in calcium intake from 3% to 10% between subjects with the highest and subjects with the lowest blood pressure. On the other hand, when subjects with and subjects without hypertension were compared separately and all the other variables in the study were controlled for, the lower calcium intake in the hypertensive subjects was not significant, despite a strict definition of systolic and diastolic hypertension that included only 1.83.4% of the population and thus those with the lowest calcium intakes.
Several recent reviews addressed the issue of calcium ingestion and blood pressure. In 1990 Cuttler and Brittain (21) found that the evidence for a role of calcium in hypertension was suggestive; Cappuccio et al (22) concluded in 1995 that there was a small, inverse association between dietary calcium intake and blood pressure; whereas Osborne et al (11) in 1996 firmly stated that dietary calcium plays an integral role in the maintenance of normal blood pressure and that an adequate intake may help reduce the risk of hypertension. This may be true, but it is unlikely that the effect of dietary calcium on blood pressure is a major one. If it were, it would have been easily documented for both sexes as well as for systolic and diastolic blood pressure. However, this has not been the case in epidemiologic studies. In a study by Ackley et al (6), the effect was seen in men but not in women. In a study by Ascherio et al (23), the effect in men was seen in lean men only. In women, calcium intake was inversely related to blood pressure but not to the development of hypertension (24). Furthermore, Iso et al (9) found an effect on systolic but not on diastolic blood pressure, whereas Kesteloot and Joossens (19) made the reverse observation. Finally, in all studies in which a negative association between calcium intake and blood pressure was found, the magnitude of the association was moderate.
Similarly, in the metaanalysis by Bucher et al (25), which included 33 studies with a total of 2412 patients, a statistically significant reduction in systolic blood pressure of only 1.27 mm Hg and a nonsignificant reduction in diastolic blood pressure of 0.24 mm Hg were found. However, in some studies, like the one by Buonopane et al (26), the effect was more pronounced. In that study, supplementation with nonfat milk for 8 wk caused a reduction in blood pressure of between 3% and 7%.
Even if the effect of calcium on blood pressure is small, that does not rule out a major effect on cardiovascular disease. Thus, Cook et al (27), in their analysis based on data from the Framingham Study and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, concluded that a 2-mm Hg reduction in diastolic blood pressure could reduce the incidence of coronary heart disease by up to 6% and the incidence of stroke and transient ischemic attack by up to 13%.
Although one cannot rule out the possibility that ingested calcium exerts its effect on blood pressure through release of gastrointestinal hormones or neural reflexes, the absorbed calcium is more likely to be of importance. One would therefore expect that an increased intake of vitamin D, which is the major regulator of calcium absorption (13), would contribute to the effect of calcium on blood pressure. Compared with the literature on calcium, there have been remarkably few studies on vitamin D intake and blood pressure, but the few that are available indicate that vitamin D intake might lower blood pressure. This was shown in an epidemiologic study (3) and when vitamin D was given as a supplement to normocalcemic (28, 29) and hypercalcemic subjects (30).
In Norway, the main sources of vitamin D are cod liver oil and dairy products, which are fortified with vitamin D. In relation to a published recommended intake (31) of 5 µg/d for persons aged <50 y and of 10 µg/d for those aged 5070 y, the vitamin D intake in our study was inadequate in the older age groups. Similar to our observations for calcium intake, the major part of the population had an intake in the mid-range (210 µg/d), >2000 subjects had an intake <2 µg/d, and slightly >3000 had an intake >10 µg/d. However, after correcting for the other variables in the study, we did not find any significant relation between vitamin D intake and blood pressure. Furthermore, we did not find any interaction between calcium and vitamin D intakes on blood pressure.
Our study has several shortcomings. First, we looked at calcium intake from dairy products only, and the effect on blood pressure could therefore have come from a number of components found in milk. This concern was emphasized by others (6, 7), and the problem with multicolinearity among dietary factors is well known (8). Second, the circulating amount of vitamin D that would have an effect on blood pressure is not the result of vitamin ingestion only but also of exposure to sunlight (32), which was not evaluated in our study. Finally, we used a self-administered diet questionnaire, which is not as accurate as an interview with a dietitian. However, the reproducibility of dietary data from this self-administered questionnaire was evaluated and a high concordance was found between answers given to the same questions 1 y apart (33).
In conclusion, we found a weak, negative association between calcium intake from dairy sources and blood pressure. This could be important because small reductions in blood pressure might have a significant effect on primary prevention of cardiovascular diseases.
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