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The role of vitamin K in cardiovascular health and bone strength

A new study has shown that vitamin K2 could be beneficial for proper calcium utilisation and increase the safety of age-related bone loss treatments.

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Calcium is a crucial mineral that the body needs for good health. Many people take calcium supplements hoping to strengthen their bones, particularly when they suffer from osteoporosis, a condition in which the density and quality of bones are reduced. However, the safety of calcium supplements has been questioned because of their possible association with cardiovascular risk. Partially supported by the EU-funded INTRICARE project, a team of researchers has examined the impact of calcium supplementation on bone and cardiovascular health, and the role of vitamin K in providing a safer treatment of osteoporosis. The findings were published in the journal ‘Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine’. “It is still unclear whether calcium supplementation significantly contributes to the reduction of bone fragility and fracture risk. Data suggest that supplementing post-menopausal women with high doses of calcium has a detrimental impact on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.” Role of vitamin K Over 99 % of total body calcium is stored in teeth and bones. The remainder is present in blood, extracellular fluid, muscle and other tissues. The existence of calcium salts outside the bone is referred to as extra-skeletal calcification. In the paper, the researchers explain the notion of “calcium paradox” that involves the paradoxical coexistence of reduced bone mineral density and increased vascular calcification under several pathological conditions. They emphasise that this is particularly common in post-menopausal osteoporotic women and patients with chronic kidney disease. The study states: “For many years vascular calcification was considered as a clinically irrelevant process reliant of passive deposition of calcium crystals, merely reflecting a passive feature of disease and aging. Recent evidence however suggests otherwise, and vascular calcification appears to be a highly regulated process.” The article notes that “vitamin K could serve as complementary nutrient to calcium (and vitamin D) to protect from increased risk for vascular calcification thereby allowing more safe treatment of osteoporosis.” It adds: “The combination of vitamin K and calcium could reduce risk on post-menopausal bone and simultaneously prevent vascular calcification, thereby aiding the beneficial effects of calcium in bone and preventing the negatively associated vascular effects of supplemental calcium intake.” In a press release by NattoPharma, which also supported the research, senior author and research project leader Prof. Leon Schurgers says that the investigation “will provide further evidence that calcium without adequate vitamin K2 consumption might end up in the soft tissues where it is not wanted, rather than in the bone matrix, where it is needed.” The ongoing INTRICARE (International Network for Training on Risks of vascular Intimal Calcification And roads to Regression of cardiovascular diseasE) project aims “to train a new generation of scientist that will be excellently skilled to expedite our understanding of vulnerable plaque formation, with a particular focus on microcalcification, and to develop innovative solutions for the early prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of atherosclerosis,” as stated on the project website. INTRICARE is supporting various early-stage researchers working on a total of 15 projects. For more information, please see: INTRICARE project website

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