Author:
Gaster Deborah,Havivi E.,Guggenheim K.
Abstract
1. The interrelationships between dietary calcium, fluorine and vitamin D were studied in young rats.2. Rats maintained on a low-Ca diet gained less weight and had less ash in their bones. Their femurs incorporated more radioactive Ca than those of rats kept on a control diet. Supplementation of the diet with F slightly decreased growth and the content of bone ash without any effect on the content of Ca and phosphorus in the bone ash. The F supplement decreased uptake of radioactive Ca by bone. Addition of vitamin D to a low-Ca diet improved growth and, when added alone, increased uptake of radioactive Ca by bone without affecting the content in femurs of ash, Ca or P. Addition of F to a low-Ca diet supplemented with vitamin D diminished the uptake of radioactive Ca.3. Decrease of bone ash in rats fed the low-Ca diet was accompanied by an increase in bone nitrogen. The bones of the unsupplemented rats contained less citric acid per unit of dry, fat-free mass. Addition of F decreased citric acid, whereas addition of vitamin D increased it.4. The results are discussed and it is concluded that vitamin D added to a low-Ca diet does not exert a calcifying effect on bone, but rather increases Ca turnover. F, on the other hand, reduces the exchangeability of bone mineral.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
17 articles.
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