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How much Vit D? (again)

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By LaRue Huget

Washington Post

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Vitamin D is found in supplements, fortified foods and fatty fish, but

sunshine has long been the main way that humans get enough of it.

For most of history, humans got all the Vitamin D they needed simply by

being outdoors, absorbing the sun's ultraviolet light. Ultraviolet radiation

triggers the body's production (a two-step process involving both liver and

kidney) of the vitamin, which is technically a hormone. What the body didn't

use right away, it stored in fat.

But over the millennia, humans moved into the shade. They migrated from

equatorial regions to less sunny latitudes, switched from hunting and

farming to indoor jobs and -- just in the past few decades -- began

slathering themselves with sunscreen. As scientists in recent years began to

assess the extent and import of this diminished exposure to sunlight,

they've also amassed compelling research showing just how vital Vitamin D

may be.

Identified in the early 20th century as the best defense against the

bone-softening disease rickets, Vitamin D has since been lauded for fending

off osteoporosis and hip fractures in older people (by empowering calcium to

strengthen bones and probably by boosting muscle strength, which helps keep

people on their feet). Some research even suggests Vitamin D may work in the

brain to improve balance, another boon to tumble-prone seniors.

Researchers have discovered that nearly every kind of tissue in the body is

equipped with Vitamin D receptors, which suggests that the substance may be

involved in all kinds of functions. Though studies of Vitamin D's role in

cancer prevention have not proved conclusive, it appears likely that the

vitamin may help protect against colon cancer and perhaps against breast and

prostate cancer.

It's also believed to help ward off diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and

there's a growing hunch that lack of Vitamin D may make people more

vulnerable to such autoimmune diseases as multiple sclerosis. (That idea is

supported by the fact that the incidence of MS increases with distance from

the equator.)

So, pretty much everyone agrees that your body needs Vitamin D. Just how

much, though, is under debate. U.S. guidelines established 12 years ago by

the Institute of Medicine recommend 200 international units, or IUs, for

children and others through age 50, 400 IUs for people ages 51 to 70 and 600

IUs for those 71 and older. But many experts now say we need more --

probably twice, maybe three or even five times more. (The American Academy

of Pediatrics last year recommended bumping the level for babies, kids and

teens up to 400 IUs.)

Evidence is mounting that many Americans, even newborns whose mothers have

dutifully taken Vitamin D supplements during pregnancy, are deficient in

Vitamin D. A new Institute of Medicine panel is reviewing the

recommendations on Vitamin D and calcium; a draft report is expected in

January.

The amount of Vitamin D you need depends on several variables: The older you

get, the more you need to ingest, because your body loses its facility at

producing it; dark-skinned people don't produce as much as light-skinned

folks; the heavier you are, the more Vitamin D you need to take in. But no

matter how much you need, the question remains: What's the best way to get

this nutrient into your body?

Vitamin D occurs naturally in only a handful of foods, and not necessarily

those that Americans eat in great quantities. Fatty fish such as salmon,

tuna, mackerel and herring top the list, but as Bonnie Liebman, director of

nutrition for the Center for Science in the Public Interest and author of

many articles about Vitamin D, notes, you'd have to eat an awful lot of

herrings to make your quota. Similarly, other food sources such as eggs

contain such small amounts that you'd need to pull a Cool Hand Luke to

consume enough.

In days of yore, people swore by cod liver oil for its health benefits.

Indeed, a single teaspoonful provides several days' worth of Vitamin D

(under the current recommendations, at least). But Liebman points out that

cod liver oil also contains lots of Vitamin A, and too much of that vitamin

can actually increase risk of osteoporosis and hip fracture.

Other foods that we associate with Vitamin D, such as milk and breakfast

cereal, don't naturally contain the vitamin but are instead fortified with

it. Even so, neither provides enough to meet current estimations of a

person's needs.

That leaves us with two other options: supplements and sunshine. Liebman is

among the many experts who advocate meeting daily Vitamin D demands through

taking supplements. Many daily multivitamins provide at least the currently

recommended 400 IU, and popular calcium supplements also contain Vitamin D.

(There appears to be little risk of overdoing it; Vitamin D overload is

rare, and the most likely health problem it might entail is increased risk

of developing kidney stones.)

But Holick, a professor of medicine, physiology and biophysics at

Boston University School of Medicine, likes to keep sunshine in the mix.

Holick, who has been at the forefront of Vitamin D research, thinks babies

and kids should get 1,000 IUs of Vitamin D daily; teens and adults, he says,

should get 2,000.

Acknowledging the difficulty of getting that much from food, Holick suggests

a combination of supplements and what he calls " sensible sun exposure, "

which means spending a limited time outdoors with your arms and legs

uncovered (and free of sunscreen), then applying clothing or sunscreen long

before the danger of sunburn sets in.

Sounds sensible indeed. I think I'll throw on some shorts and a tank top,

head outside and wash down a Vitamin D supplement with a big glass of milk.

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