Calcium is the body's main bone-building mineral. Correcting a genuine shortfall is worthwhile and, with vitamin D and weight-bearing exercise, modestly slows bone loss. For people already getting enough, supplement benefit looks small while downsides—digestive upset, kidney stones, and an unsettled heart-risk question—remain; food behaves more favorably than supplements. (Full Review)
| Marker | Target | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Serum calcium | 9.0–10.0 mg/dL | Detects hypercalcemia from over-supplementation |
| 25-hydroxyvitamin D | 40–60 ng/mL | Vitamin D drives calcium absorption; guides whether calcium will be used |
| Intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) | 15–40 pg/mL | High PTH signals inadequate calcium/vitamin D; low PTH may signal excess |
| 24-hour urinary calcium | 100–250 mg/24h | Identifies high excretors at risk of kidney stones |
| Serum phosphorus | 2.5–4.0 mg/dL | Balances with calcium in bone metabolism |
| Estimated GFR (eGFR) | >60 mL/min/1.73m² | Reduced kidney function raises risk from calcium load |
Cadence: Baseline, then ~3–6 months after starting and every 6–12 months for higher-risk users