Dietary intake of 200-700 mg/day calcium reduces stroke among Asians

Afbeelding

Objectives:
Prospective cohorts are inconsistent regarding the association between dietary calcium intake and the risk of stroke. Therefore, this review article has been conducted.

Does dietary intake of calcium reduce risk of stroke?

Study design:
This review article included 18 prospective cohort studies witth19,557 stroke cases (persons) among 882,181 participants.

Results and conclusions:
The investigators found a nonlinear association between calcium intake and risk of stroke [p nonlinearity 0.003].

The investigators found compared with the lowest value of zero assumed as the reference, dietary intake of 200 mg/day calcium significantly reduced stroke risk with 5% [95% CI = 0.92 to 0.98].
This protective effect was only found in Asian countries.

The investigators found compared with the lowest value of zero assumed as the reference, dietary intake of 300 mg/day calcium significantly reduced stroke risk with 6% [95% CI = 0.90 to 0.98].
This protective effect was only found in Asian countries.

The investigators found compared with the lowest value of zero assumed as the reference, dietary intake of 500 mg/day calcium significantly reduced stroke risk with 5% [95% CI = 0.90 to 0.99].
This protective effect was only found in Asian countries.

The investigators found no protective effect for stroke at dietary intake of 700 mg/day calcium or higher.

The investigators concluded dietary intake of 200-700 mg/day calcium reduces stroke risk among Asians.

Original title:
Dietary calcium intake and the risk of stroke: Meta-analysis of cohort studies by Wang ZM, Bu XX, […], Nie ZL.

Link:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36958976/

Additional information of El Mondo:
Find more information/studies on calcium and stroke right here.