Bone Stack Calculator (Calcium + D + K2 + Mg + Protein)






Bone Stack Calculator (Calcium + D + K2 + Mg + Protein) | UsefulVitamins



Calculate the bone stack — calcium + vitamin D + K2 + magnesium + protein — by age, sex, and risk factors. The 1,200 mg calcium-only era is over; modern bone health is a 4-5 cofactor question. Calculator helps avoid calcium-only over-supplementation (arterial calcification risk). Math, not medical advice.

Your situation





Component Daily target Best form Notes

Why each cofactor matters

  • Calcium — building block of hydroxyapatite. Without enough, body resorbs from skeleton.
  • Vitamin D — required for intestinal calcium absorption. Without D, only 10-15% of dietary calcium absorbs (vs 30-40% with adequate D).
  • K2 (MK-7) — activates osteocalcin (puts calcium IN bone) and matrix Gla protein (keeps calcium OUT of arteries). The “directional traffic cop.”
  • Magnesium — required cofactor for vitamin D metabolism (multiple enzymes). Mg deficiency reduces D effectiveness. Also direct bone matrix component.
  • Protein — collagen scaffold for bone. Adequate protein (~1.0-1.2 g/kg in older adults) is essential. Under-protein is a hidden cause of fragility fractures.
  • Strontium, boron, silicon — minor trace minerals with some evidence. Generally adequate from diverse diet.

The calcium-from-food preference

Multiple lines of evidence suggest dietary calcium is safer than supplemental calcium at the same dose:

  • Dietary calcium is absorbed gradually with meals; supplement calcium is a bolus.
  • Dietary calcium comes with cofactors (protein, Mg, K from dairy/greens).
  • Bolland 2010 meta-analysis suggested supplemental calcium (but not dietary) may modestly increase CV events.
  • Aim to fill the dietary-RDA gap with supplement, not replace dietary calcium.
  • Best food sources: dairy (~300 mg/cup milk), kale (~100 mg/cup cooked), sardines (~325 mg/3oz), tofu (calcium-set, ~250 mg/half cup), almonds (~75 mg/oz), fortified plant milks (~300 mg/cup).

Best calcium supplement forms

  • Calcium carbonate: cheapest, 40% elemental Ca. Take with meals (needs stomach acid). Avoid with PPIs.
  • Calcium citrate: better absorbed (especially on empty stomach or with PPIs). 21% elemental Ca.
  • Calcium hydroxyapatite (microcrystalline): from bone meal, mimics bone composition. Premium positioning.
  • Calcium gluconate / lactate: low elemental %, larger pill burden.
  • Algae-based calcium (AlgaeCal): markets clinical trials showing bone density improvements — limited independent replication.



Author

  • Emily Collins 1

    Emily Collins, as a nutrition researcher, is responsible for providing in-depth insights and analysis on supplements and superfoods. Her articles on UsefulVitamins.com delve into the benefits, potential drawbacks, and evidence-based recommendations for various supplements and superfoods. Emily's expertise in nutrition research ensures that readers receive accurate and reliable information to make informed choices about incorporating these products into their health routines.

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