Amazing Discovery: "Algas Calcareas" - A Plant Calcium

Amazing Plant Calcium Discovered:


This wild-harvested, plant-sourced calcium is derived from a South American marine algae called Algas Calcareas. The entire kiwi-fruit size algae ball is hand harvested, sun dried, then milled into a powder. There is no extraction process or additives used - just pure whole food. 

The CalRich marine plant draws calcium and 70 other minerals from sea water and pre-digests it for you much like a carrot or potato root breaks down the in-edible rock minerals in soil converting them into a useable form your body recognizes as food. CalRich plant-digested calcium is so body-friendly that 97% of CalRich 's calcium goes into solution in 30 minutes using USP standard tests simulating stomach conditions - proving it is very bio-accessible. 

Algas Calcareas is Certified Organic

Organic certification attests to both the purity, and to the sustainability of this algae. A third party organization called IBD Certificacoes has certified that the harvest area is free of pollutants and that the harvest levels are allowing this resource to regenerate. IBD is held responsible by the USDA and IFOAM (International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements) ensuring that CalRich is the highest quality, wild-harvested ingredient. 

Minerals are the Key

Did you know that clinical studies demonstrate trace minerals are important for bone growth in addition to calcium and magnesium? Patent pending CalRich is more than a plant-source, whole-food calcium supplement. CalRich also contains high levels of natural magnesium, plus more than 70 trace minerals, and phyto-nutrients! You get a full spectrum of minerals and plant nutrients working for you instead of a single element like most calcium supplements provide!

Does Your Calcium Supplement Contain Silica?

Take the trace mineral silica for example. While most osteoporosis research has focused on the mineral portion of bones, the new frontier according to some scientists will center around the flexible collagen part of your bones which is supported by silica. Silica builds your bone collagen, yet is deficient in a typical American diet.

There is no RDA established for it, but Silica is normally found at 5 - 20 mg per day in your diet. CalRich naturally contains 65 mg of organic silica in a daily dose, so we believe it may be making a valuable contribution to the bone growth results we are seeing in the CalRich clinical studies. Like silica, boron, magnesium, manganese, zinc, vanadium and so many other minerals are vital to your bone health, yet deficient from your food. CalRich is a rich source of these trace minerals.

By the way, which is the most important mineral for your bone health? Answer: the one YOU are missing!

CalRich INCREASES Your Bone Mass: 

Although the best you can do with regular calcium supplements is slow your annual bone loss, you can expect more from CalRich Depending on the formulation, you can either STOP the loss entirely at one year, or you can actually INCREASE your bone density at six months. 

Bone Building Cell Study - CalRich vs. Rock Calcium:


Researchers from Harvard Medical School and the University of Connecticut conducted a head to head test of CalRich versus the types of rock calcium usually found in supplements…calcium carbonate and calcium citrate. CalRich was better in every parameter tested. Please see the CalRich Bone Building Cell Study!

The study authors believe this extraordinary effect on human bone building cells is due to the mineral complex naturally found in CalRich


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Calcium Supplements Raise Heart Attack

Patients who took calcium increased their risk of a heart attack by about 30 percent, according to researchers who said the use of dietary supplements for preventing and treating osteoporosis should be reviewed.

In five studies with more than 8,000 patients, half of whom were on calcium, the supplement users had 143 heart attacks during the research compared with 111 for people on placebo, scientists from New Zealand, the U.K. and the U.S. wrote today in the British Medical Journal. The risk was greatest when calcium intake from food was above average, regardless of patients’ age or sex, according to the analysis.

Calcium supplements are prescribed to reduce the risk of fractures and to prevent and treat osteoporosis, a thinning of the bones. Previous studies had found no increased risk of heart attacks with higher calcium intake from food. The analysis suggests that the extra hazard is associated with supplements, the medical journal said in an e-mailed statement.

“For patients who are at risk of heart disease and also suffering from osteoporosis, perhaps calcium supplementation should not be recommended,” Suzanne Steinbaum, director of women and heart disease at the Heart & Vascular Institute of Lenox Hill Hospital in New York and a spokeswoman for the Dallas-based American Heart Association, said in a telephone interview.

Steinbaum wasn’t involved in the analysis, whose lead author is Mark Bolland, a senior research fellow in the Department of Medicine at the University of Auckland, in New Zealand.

The researchers also found a link between the calcium supplements and a higher chance of stroke or sudden death, though they said those results weren’t statistically significant.

Heart Attacks:

The analysis covered data from 11 trials, involving a total of almost 12,000 participants over age 40 on average, about half of whom were taking calcium supplements. For five of the trials, data were available on whether the patients had suffered heart attacks.

Calcium is the most prevalent mineral in the body and is found in dairy products and some green vegetables. The human body uses the mineral to strengthen its skeleton, storing 99 percent of calcium in the bones and teeth.

The recommended daily calcium allowance in the U.K. is 1,300 milligrams for adults, according to the London-based Food Standards Agency. Deficiencies are common in adults when the process of bone breakdown starts to occur more often than bone formation. Bone density can weaken, leading to osteoporosis.

Doctor’s Advice:

“Patients with osteoporosis should generally not be treated with calcium supplements, either alone or combined with vitamin D, unless they are also receiving an effective treatment for osteoporosis for a recognized indication,” John Cleland, a professor of cardiology at theUniversity of Hull in the U.K., and colleagues wrote in an editorial published along with the analysis.

The researchers said they excluded from their analysis studies that compared coadministered calcium and vitamin D supplements with placebo. The findings may not be applicable to those supplements, the authors wrote.

Osteoporosis affects an estimated 10 million Americans, according to the Washington-based National Osteoporosis Foundation. About 3 million people in the U.K. also have the condition, according to National Osteoporosis Society, based in Camerton, near Bath, England.