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Each bottle contains a high strength ratio of 4,500 mg/L (Milligrams Per liter) high grade Calcium. This is our professional super strength liquid Calcium supplement.
For adult men and women a total elemental calcium intake of 1,000 to 1,500 mg/day is suggested by the current evidence. This includes both dietary calcium and calcium supplements. The total daily intake should not exceed 2,000 mg. Proper Calcium, Magnesium, Zinc, and Potassium intake is vital for health cell structure and adequate HgH or human growth hormone support!
Calcium is used in forming bones, also known as bone mineralization, and in the proper formation and maintenance of teeth. “The skeleton of the body depends on calcium just as the more rigid, supporting structures in the earth’s crust rely to a great extent on calcareous formations like limestone.” It is also important in nerve impulse transmission, blood coagulation, and muscle contraction. Vitamin D (sunshine) and Magnesium are essential to the proper absorption and assimilation of calcium.
Human growth hormone, also called somatropin, is produced in the anterior of the pituitary gland inside the brain, it is one of the most abundant hormones secreted. It influences the growth of cells, bones, muscles and organs through out the body. Hormone production peaks at adolescence when accelerated growth occurs. If growing children have too little HGH they remain as dwarfs, while if they have too much HGH they become giants. Daily secretion declines with age. For example a 20 year old may secrete 4 to 5 times more of the growth hormone than a 60 year old.
Calcium is required for the release of energy for muscular contraction. Calcium is primarily stored in bones (99%), where the ratio of calcium to phosphorous is nearly constant at slightly greater than 2:1. Calcium is involved in numerous vital functions throughout the body, including: protein and fat digestion, energy production, nerve transmission, and the absorption of other nutrients, such as vitamin B12.
Calcium is the mineral most likely to be deficient in the average diet. Let me repeat that. Calcium is the mineral most likely to be deficient in the average diet. Calcium deficiency is a condition in which we fail to receive or to metabolize an adequate supply of Calcium. Calcium is the chief supportive element in bones and teeth. Calcium salts make up about 70 percent of bone by weight and give your bone its strength and rigidity.
About 99 percent of the calcium in the human body is held in the bones and teeth. The remaining 1 percent of calcium circulates in the bloodstream, where it performs a variety of important functions.
When we take Calcium, it absorbed in the small intestine and passes from there either into the bloodstream or ultimately into the bones. The most efficient absorption of calcium is dependent on the presence of vitamin D in the body, which is a key ingredient in the various hormones that enable calcium to pass from the digestive system into the blood or bones.
These regulatory mechanisms help to prevent a deficiency in calcium from developing in the bloodstream. When such a deficiency does develop, parathyroid hormone acts to transfer calcium from the bones in order to maintain the mineral's all-important presence in the bloodstream. This of course strips your bones of their calcium and in turn weakens your bones, making them more brittle and subject to breaking.
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