Quote:
Originally Posted by emptypepsi
I don't know, here - I wouldn't say protein is the 'cause' of osteoperosis, but certainly is one of the contributing factors.
While excess animal protein can increase urine calcium, other factors contribute to osteoperosis as well, such as excess salt, Vitamin D deficiency with aging, and arguably the most important -- lack of weight bearing exercise.
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You're correct, many things play into it, but in the US we eat SO MUCH protein that, since the body cannot store it, the protein has to be excreted through the urine which takes a huge amount of calcium to keep the Ph correct. That's why milk is a bad thing for people with osteoporosis, unless you need all the protein in the milk--which most of us don't--then it takes all the calcium in the milk and some extra out of the body in order to excrete the excess milk protein. I should have been more precise: in rich, heavy meat-eating cultures, protein is a primary cause/contributing factor in the development of osteoporosis. Sorry.