For the past 3 years, I had been consuming balanced diet with oats or similar cereals for breakfast, wheat & occasional rice for lunch & only fruits with nuts for dinner. 3-4 cups of milk with tea/coffee every day. I assume my bones wasn't able to absorb necessary calcium.
I don't know anything about your genetic disorder. My genetic disorder promotes osteoporosis.
My personal opinion: The mechanism is two fold. My condition makes people too acid and the body strips calcium from the bones to buffer the blood against that. Our cells are also known to hoard calcium. I believe this is also a buffering mechanism.
Some people with my condition try to avoid calcium because high levels of calcium in the cell is associated with cell death. So they see the calcium as a problem. I see it as a symptom of serious problems. I see it as the body desperately trying to protect itself against other chemical derangement.
My condition also is associated with an excess of glutathione in the cells. I think this is also another buffering mechanism.
Glutathione smells very sour, like skunk. As I slowly resolved the chemical derangement of my body, I sometimes went through periods where my poop smelled like skunk. I think I was dumping the glutathione that was no longer needed as a buffer.
Do you know the specific mechanism behind your genetic disorder? The specific mechanism for mine is a defect in a cell channel. This cell channel is a gating mechanism for certain molecules. When it is defective, there is a bottleneck in the system.
With doing research, I have been able to work around that and get things working closer to normal.
If you know the mechanism behind your disorder, it may be possible to do something similar and make dietary changes and lifestyle changes that help compensate for whatever your body does different from the norm.
Which is a very long way of agreeing that your body may not be absorbing or using calcium normally and you may need to alter your diet permanently to account for your genetic disorder and whatever it does to how your body handles calcium. And that may not be straight forward and obvious. You would need to understand the process or processes causing the calcium deficiency.
It may not be as simple as the bones not absorbing calcium. It isn't with my condition.
Very detailed, much appreciated.
For the past 3 years, I had been consuming balanced diet with oats or similar cereals for breakfast, wheat & occasional rice for lunch & only fruits with nuts for dinner. 3-4 cups of milk with tea/coffee every day. I assume my bones wasn't able to absorb necessary calcium.