Evidence A · Strong (bone health)
D3 fat-soluble · Ca water-soluble
Chronic
Calcium is the most abundant mineral in the body (99% in the bones), essential for muscle contraction, nerve conduction, blood clotting and enzymatic function. Vitamin D3 is a mandatory cofactor — without it, intestinal calcium absorption drops to ~10–15%; with it, it rises to 30–40%. That is why the Ca + D3 combination is the modern standard (taken separately, it is practically a waste).
Dose1 tablet/day
Calcium (carbonate)500 mg of elemental Ca
Vit D32,000 IU (50 mcg)
Food✅ With a meal (carbonate requires it)
Why it matters for ultramarathon runners
- Bone health: the repetitive impact of running stimulates bone remodeling — this requires an adequate supply of calcium + D3 + K2.
- Muscle contraction: Ca triggers every contraction; a deficiency → weakness, cramps.
- Immunity: D3 modulates the immune system; high training volumes temporarily compromise immunity — D3 keeps function stable.
- Hormones: D3 acts as a pro-hormone, working on receptors in every tissue.
Primary product: Needs Vita Calcium Carbonate 500mg + D3 2000IU
The Needs Vita Calcium Carbonate + D3 is a simple, economical Brazilian option (the same brand as the UC-II Type II you use for joints).
- Composition/tablet: 500 mg of elemental calcium (from the carbonate) + 2,000 IU of vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol)
- Bottle: 60 tablets = 60 days (1 tablet/day)
- Average price: R$45,00
- Cost/dose: R$0,75
- Where to buy: Droga Raia, Drogasil, Drogaria São Paulo
Alternative: LE Bone Restore (more complete)
Bone Restore by Life Extension is a more complete bone complex that delivers 5 minerals + vitamins in 4 capsules/dose:
- Calcium (4 forms): 700 mg — carbonate + citrate malate + chelated bisglycinate + fructoborate
- Magnesium: 300 mg (oxide)
- Vitamin D3: 1,000 IU (cholecalciferol)
- Vitamin C: 48 mg (ascorbyl palmitate)
- Boron: 3 mg (Fruitex B® OsteoBoron® — patented)
- Zinc: 2 mg · Manganese: 1 mg · Silicon: 5 mg (from horsetail)
- Bottle: 120 capsules = 30 doses (4 caps/dose)
- Price: $8.25 USD
- Cost/dose: R$1,42 (≈ 2× the Needs Vita, but with more ingredients)
💡 When to switch from Needs Vita to Bone Restore:
- If you want to cover Mg, K cofactors and boron in a single capsule → Bone Restore (300 mg Mg + boron = bonus)
- If you prefer pure calcium with D3 without multiple minerals (in case you use Magnen B6 / Neuro-Mag separately) → Needs Vita
- For the 2 bottles to be alternatives (not simultaneous): mind the total Mg/D3 in the stack
Comparison: 1 dose of each
| Ingredient | Needs Vita (1 tablet) | LE Bone Restore (4 caps) |
|---|---|---|
| Calcium | 500 mg (1 form) | 700 mg (4 forms) |
| Vit D3 | 2,000 IU | 1,000 IU |
| Mg | — | 300 mg |
| Boron | — | 3 mg |
| K2 | — | — (the "Bone Restore w/ Vit K2" version has it) |
| Other minerals | — | Zn, Mn, Si |
| Vit C | — | 48 mg |
| Form of Ca | Carbonate (needs gastric acid) | Mix (citrate malate works fasted) |
| Cost/dose | R$0,75 | R$1,42 |
How to take
- Timing: 1 tablet in the morning or at lunch — always with a meal (the carbonate needs gastric acid to ionize).
- Synergy with fat: D3 is fat-soluble — a meal with fat enhances absorption.
- Space it from magnesium: Ca and Mg compete for cellular transport. Ideal: Calcium at breakfast/lunch, Magnen B6 at lunch/dinner (and Neuro-Mag at night).
- Space it from iron/zinc: Ca also competes with Fe and Zn. Do not take it at the same time as a multivitamin if possible.
⚠️ Calcium Carbonate vs. Citrate: the carbonate (in this product) has ~25–30% absorption and requires gastric acid — that is why it is mandatory to take it with a meal. The citrate has ~30–35% absorption and works fasted. For most people, the carbonate with food is equivalent in practice. If you take omeprazole or have hypochlorhydria, prefer the citrate.
Total D3 in your stack — caution
You are combining D3 from 2 sources:
- Two-Per-Day Multivitamin: 2,000 IU/day (in 2 caps)
- Needs Vita Calcium: 2,000 IU/day (in 1 tablet)
- Total: ~4,000 IU/day
💡 4,000 IU/day is safe — it is below the UL (Tolerable Upper Intake Level) of 10,000 IU/day for adults. It is in fact the dose recommended for many athletes and by endocrinologists to keep 25(OH)D between 40–60 ng/mL. If a blood test shows <30 ng/mL, you may even supplement extra D3 to reach 5,000 IU/day temporarily.
What is missing in the combo (and how to compensate)
- Vitamin K2 (MK-7): directs calcium to the bones (instead of the arteries). Ca + D3 without K2 can increase vascular calcification with long-term use. Consider adding K2 100–200 mcg/day or fermented foods (natto, aged cheeses).
- Magnesium: a cofactor in converting inactive D3 into active D3. You already have this covered via Magnen B6 and Neuro-Mag.
- Boron: helps with bone metabolism. Already present in the Two-Per-Day.
For whom supplemental calcium is most important
- Postmenopausal women (the drop in estrogen accelerates bone loss)
- Athletes with low dairy intake
- Family history of osteoporosis
- Bone densitometry showing osteopenia/osteoporosis
- Chronic use of corticosteroids or PPIs (omeprazole, etc.)
When NOT to use / cautions
- History of kidney stones: consult a nephrologist first — Ca + low hydration can favor their formation.
- Hypercalcemia: absolute contraindication.
- Parathyroid diseases: requires medical follow-up.
- Use of digitalis drugs: Ca can potentiate arrhythmias.