Guest guest Posted November 18, 2002 Report Share Posted November 18, 2002 Hi , does anyone know what would be the implications of a child showing calcium in her urine ? Regards Deborah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2002 Report Share Posted November 18, 2002 ---Early bone loss leading to osteoposis in later life. her parents should be aware that a diet high in fluorides(found in tap water and toothpastes), Carbonated beverages, traditional Dairy and meats are implicated in bone loss. She should be getting her omega 3s,6s and 9s in the correct balance. A diet high in phosphoric acids contributes to calcium loss. She might not be getting sufficient vitamin D and/or boron. When Vitamin D is lacking, calcium cannot be utilized effectively. I have a list of high boron foods from another list which I could send on for you. This early bone loss is pathetically linked to high dairy consumption and is due mainly to the hormones, antibiotics and rBGH that is present in high amounts in dairy foods now. She should have organic yogurt each day, this would provide a sufficient amount, with more of her calcium derived from plant rather than animal sources. Animal proteins are high in phosphoric and arachadonic acids which tend to contribute to these problemsrather than alleviate them in any way. http://wwww.stonyfield.com http://www. horizonorganic.com Best regards, JoAnn Guest mrsjoguest In Gettingwell, " beaniesmum2001 " <MONXYMOO@a...> wrote: > Hi , > does anyone know what would be the implications of a child showing > calcium in her urine ? > Regards > Deborah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 18, 2002 Report Share Posted November 18, 2002 Hi , thank you for such a detailled and interesting reply - I shall go through the links too. What I didn't tell you, as I didn't want to affect anyones replies, was that she is a child with autism who has a history of leaky gut which was briefly treated with gfcf diet ( as my son has been very successfully ) but she was taken off the diet quite some time ago . Interestingly we are all finding that our children find it impossible to process anything properly with most of us having to supplement EFA's/omega oils, plus calcium , magnesium and most vits and mins. At first glance this would suggest to me that her gut problems need to be readdressed but , if I may , I will come back with more questions if I have any Thanks for your speedy reply Regards Deborah -- In Gettingwell, " JoAnn Guest " <angelprincessjo> wrote: > ---Early bone loss leading to osteoposis in later life. her parents > should be aware that a diet high in fluorides(found in tap water and > toothpastes), Carbonated beverages, traditional Dairy and meats are > implicated in bone loss. She should be getting her omega 3s,6s and 9s > in the correct balance. > A diet high in phosphoric acids contributes to calcium loss. > She might not be getting sufficient vitamin D and/or boron. > When Vitamin D is lacking, calcium cannot be utilized effectively. > I have a list of high boron foods from another list which I could > send on for you. > This early bone loss is pathetically linked to high dairy consumption > and is due mainly to the hormones, antibiotics and rBGH that is > present in high amounts in dairy foods now. > She should have organic yogurt each day, > this would provide > a sufficient amount, > with more of her > calcium derived from plant rather than > animal sources. > Animal proteins are high in phosphoric > and arachadonic acids which > tend to contribute to these > problemsrather than alleviate > them in any way. > > http://wwww.stonyfield.com > http://www. horizonorganic.com > > > Best regards, > JoAnn Guest > mrsjoguest@s... > > In Gettingwell, " beaniesmum2001 " <MONXYMOO@a...> wrote: > > Hi , > > does anyone know what would be the implications of a child showing > > calcium in her urine ? > > Regards > > Deborah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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