An epidemic of vitamin D deficiency. (Enough Isn't Enough).Many U.S. women of childbearing age, particularly those of African descent, lack sufficient vitamin D vitamin D Any of a group of fat-soluble alcohols important in calcium metabolism in animals to form strong bones and teeth and prevent rickets and osteoporosis. It is formed by ultraviolet radiation (sunlight) of sterols (see steroid) present in the skin. even though they consume the recommended amount, a new study suggests. Symptoms of vitamin D deficiency Vitamin D Deficiency Definition Vitamin D deficiency exists when the concentration of 25-hydroxy-vitamin D (25-OH-D) in the blood serum occurs at 12 ng/ml (nanograms/milliliter), or less. can be subtle among adults, but infants born to these women could be marked for major health problems. Vitamin D is an essential nutrient for proper bone growth, and children who get too little can develop tickets, a skeletal disease. A newborn's quotient of the vitamin is largely determined by the concentration in the mother's blood. Recent research has identified rickets rickets or rachitis (rəkī`tĭs), bone disease caused by a deficiency of vitamin D or calcium. Essential in regulating calcium and phosphorus absorption by the body, vitamin D can be formed in the skin by ultraviolet , once nearly conquered in the United Sates, as a reemerging problem among African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. children. The findings raised scientists' concerns that the children's mothers may be lacking in vitamin D. There's also some evidence that insufficient vitamin D makes people vulnerable to certain forms of cancer and diabetes. Human skin produces vitamin D when exposed to sunlight. People also obtain the nutrient by consuming vitamin supplements, fish oil, and breakfast cereals and milk fortified fortified (fôrt adj containing additives more potent than the principal ingredient. with vitamin D. However, heavily pigmented skin is less efficient than light skin at synthesizing vitamin D from sunlight. Furthermore, many nonwhite people can't easily digest the lactose in dairy products, so they limit their milk consumption and thus vitamin D intake. To investigate the incidence and causes of vitamin D deficiency, researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. in Atlanta reviewed the health and eating habits of white and black nonpregnant U.S. women, ages 15 to 49. The team used data from a national nutritional survey conducted between 1988 and 1994. The researchers considered the women's blood concentrations of a component of vitamin D called 25-hydroxyvitamin D, or 25(OH)D, and how often they consumed milk, cereal, and dietary supplements. The researchers also analyzed indicators of each woman's exposure to sunlight and several other factors that can affect 25(OH)D concentration in blood. In the July American Journal of Clinical Nutrition Clinical nutrition The use of diet and nutritional supplements as a way to enhance health prevent disease. Mentioned in: Naturopathic Medicine , Kelley S. Scanlon and her colleagues report that 42 percent of the 1,546 African American women in the study had 25(OH)D concentrations below 15 micrograms per liter ([micro]g/l), which some past studies have identified as marking vitamin D deficiency. Of the 1,426 white women in the study, only 4.2 percent had 25(OH)D concentrations below that threshold. The recommended daily intake of vitamin D for adult women is 5 [micro]g. Among black women getting one to two times the recommended daily dose from supplements, and potentially more from other food and sunlight, 30 percent had a low 25(OH)D blood concentration. The new data "provide irrefutable irrefutable - The opposite of refutable. evidence that vitamin D deficiency is a major unrecognized epidemic in adult women of childbearing age," argues Michael F. Holick of Boston University. In an article accompanying the new study, he says that the adequate intake adequate intake (AI), n the consumption and absorption of sufficient food, vitamins, and essential minerals necessary to maintain health. See also dietary reference intakes; estimated average requirement; recommended dietary allowances; and upper intake of vitamin D for adults who don't get significant exposure to sunlight should probably be at least four times the currently recommended amount. |
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