DRB Strontium Bone Maker 60
Vcaps
Helps maintain strong, healthy bones.
Doctor's Best
In
Vitro and Animal Studies
Strontium is a bone-seeking
mineral incorporated by ionic substitution for calcium onto the
crystal surface of bone.2 In the test-tube (in vitro), strontium
inhibits the activity of osteoclasts, bone cells that break down
bone, or “resorb” bone as part of the normal bone remodeling
process.3 The effect of strontium, in the form of strontium citrate
(a salt of strontium and ranelic acid), was studied in monkeys over
a six-month period. Strontium altered the remodeling of bone in the
monkeys, resulting in decreased bone resorption with a concomitant
maintenance of bone formation. A trend toward increased volume of
osteoid, the organic matrix of bone, was observed, although this was
not associated with defects in bone mineralization.4 In another
animal study, monkeys fed strontium at high doses for six weeks
showed a marked increase in bone strontium content. No harmful
effects on bone mineral chemistry or structure occurred.5 At low
doses, strontium has been shown to increase the number of bone
forming sites in thighbones of adult rats, without adverse effects
on the mineral content of bone or mineralization of the organic bone
matrix.6 Strontium was shown to reverse bone loss induced by
estrogen deficiency in rats.7
Clinical
Trials
Human clinical trials have
examined the effect of strontium on bone in postmenopausal women. In
the dose-ranging (Phase 2) PREVOS trial, women in early menopause
were administered strontium citrate or a placebo for two years.
Strontium citrate was given at daily doses of 125 mg, 500 mg or 1
gram. (Total weight of compound; strontium plus ranelic acid).
Compared to women in the placebo group, who lost bone, women on
strontium at the 1 gram dose showed statistically significant
increases in bone mineral density (BMD) of the hip, thigh and lumbar
spine. Biochemical markers of bone formation, such as serum alkaline
phosphatase, increased. No effect on markers of bone resorption was
observed, leading to the conclusion that strontium citrate, at the 1
gram daily dose, increased bone formation without decreasing bone
resorption proportionally. It was concluded that 1 gram per day is
the minimum effective daily dose of strontium citrate in these
women.8
In another Phase 2 trial (STRATOS
trial), 353 postmenopausal women with osteoporosis, who had
experienced at least one spinal fracture, took strontium citrate for
two years at daily doses of 500 mg, 1 gram or 2 grams. Women on the
2-gram dose showed a significantly greater increase in lumbar spine
BMD than those on placebo. The number of subjects who had new spinal
deformities was significantly reduced.9 As in the PREVOS trial,
serum levels of alkaline phosphatase, a marker of bone formation,
increased, while markers of bone resorption (breakdown) decreased.
The overall conclusion is that the minimum effective daily dose of
strontium citrate (whole compound) is 1 gram in early postmenopausal
non-osteoporotic women and 2 grams in postmenopausal women with
osteoporosis.10
Phase 3 efficacy studies on
strontium citrate have been conducted on 1649 subjects in 12
countries. These studies began with an open-run (non-controlled
study period in which subjects took calcium and vitamin D
supplements to normalize their blood levels of these nutrients.11
Following this, two parallel groups were administered 2 grams daily
of strontium citrate or placebo for 3-years. The subjects continued
to take calcium and vitamin D during the study. In subjects on
strontium citrate, BMD increased in the lumbar vertebrae by 14.4
percent and in the thighbone by 8.3 percent. The number and risk of
vertebral fractures decreased.
DRB Strontium Bone Maker 60 Vcaps
DRBStron $13.99

Suggested Use: Take two capsules daily. Calcium intake must also be
adequate. Do not take this product with calcium supplements.
Strontium ranelate was well-tolerated in the trials discussed above. The
incidence of adverse events in subjects on strontium ranelate was
statistically equivalent to the placebo groups, and no negative effects on
hematology and other biochemical parameters have been observed.
In view of the fact that subjects on the strontium trials also took calcium,
and in some cases vitamin D, to maintain normal blood levels of these
nutrients, it is important to ensure calcium and vitamin D intakes are
adequate when supplementing with strontium. This is underscored by earlier
research on animals suggesting that increasing the intake of strontium via
diet may demineralize bone when calcium is deficient.13 In rats with chronic
kidney failure, strontium has been shown to cause osteomalacia, a condition
in which bone is softened due to lack of mineral content. For this reason,
people on kidney dialysis should not use strontium supplements.
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