Alla i Sverige behöver D-vitamin tillskott under höst, vinter och våren.
En ny forsknings rapport meddelar att dagliga rekommendationer är allt för låga för att undvika allvarliga sjukdomar.
Time for Vitamin D Supplementation!
Beginning in September in Scandinavia the sun is positioned far enough away that we are no longer able to produce D vitamin when our skin is exposed to sunlight. This means everyone (EVERYONE) living in The Nordic latitudes should supplement with D vitamin from September until May. This recommendation comes from one of many sources: the Vitamin D council is a nonprofit organization working to educate the public about the importance of D vitamin. The council was started by a Canadian medical doctor whose idea was to create a center for evidence-based vitamin D research and a reliable source of information for the general public. Read the most recent research at: vitamindcouncil.org.
What does this mean for your child older than 2? Since everyone i n Scandinavia should supplement D vitamin, you can read below amounts that are appropriate, when their shadow is shorter than they are, and they are in shorts, they do not need extra D vitamin (typically july and august).
Hur påverkar D-vitamin brist oss som bor i Skandinavien?
Flera studier har publicerats nyligen som tittar närmare på hur brist på vitamin D gör oss känsligare för att utveckla allergi, astma eller atopiskt eksem. I Skandinavien är risk för D vitamin brist ovanligt hög på grund av främst latituden sedan den långa mörka vintern. Brist på D vitamin är också kopplat till en del autoimmuna sjukdomar som förekommer oftare i norden. Tillskott under vintern har rekommenderats för att minska risk för influensa samt andra kroniska sjukdomar. De som bor i Skandinavien behöver tillskott under höst, vinter och vår. Vitamin D Council forskar kring D vitamin och publicerar råd och information i ett brev alla har tillgång till via vitamindcouncil.org.
The Vitamin D Council is a nonprofit organization founded by a Doctor of Medicine concerned about the increasing deficiency of vitamin D and the consequences associated with it. The goal is to educate patients, families, doctors and health professionals on vitamin D and safe, sensible sun exposure to improve the quality and longevity of their lives.
Ni som inte tål mjölkprodukter har högre risk att drabbas av både D-vitamin och kalciumbrist, vilket gör det ännu viktigare för er med tillskott. Här är en länk till mjölkfri och soyfri alternativ Sammanfattning mjölk produkter och mjölkfria alternativ
Om du har invandrat till Sverige eller har lätt att bli brun i solen, har du nog behov av extra D vitamin. Bara 20% av D vitamin räknas att komma från kosten. Vi hittar D vitamin i sardiner, lax, sill, hälleflundra, tonfisk i olja och makrill. Mindre mängder hittas i ägg, griskött, räkor, kycklingkött och lamm. Bästa källorna för kalcium är oskalade sesamfrön, ost, persilja, hasselnötter, grönkål och mjölk. Åttio procent ska produceras av huden när den exponeras till solen.
Intake of magnesium has an important impact on the uptake and utilization of D vitamin.
Magnesium, vitamin D status and mortality: results from US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2001 to 2006 and NHANES III
How much Vitamin D should you take?
Recommended doses should be individualized based on dietary and sun exposure habits and the latitude of the country, and they can also be adjusted according to body mass index, age, and skin color, with obese, elderly, and dark-skinned people needing higher doses.
A vitamin D deficiency can occur when usual intake is lower than recommended levels over time, exposure to sunlight is limited, the kidneys cannot convert 25(OH)D to its active form, or absorption of vitamin D from the digestive tract is inadequate. Fish liver oil and fatty fish are the best sources of foods with D vitamin. Vitamin D-deficient diets are associated with milk allergy, lactose intolerance, ovo-vegetarianism, and veganism. Other groups at risk for D vitamin deficiency include:
- breastfed infants
- infants of mothers who have D vitamin deficiency
- the elderly (due to reduced capacity to absorb D vitamin)
- people who do not get outside regularly
- dark skinned people
- people covering their bodies
- people with Crohns disease, liver disease, cystic fibrosis, kidney disease
- children and adults who are obese or have had gastric bypass surgery
- people with fat malabsorption problems
- people taking medications: anticonvulsants, glucocorticoids, antifungals or cholesterol reducing medications
The infants D vitamin status is dependent on the mothers D vitamin status at birth. The pregnant mother with vitamin D deficiency will have an infant that is deficient in D vitamin. Low infant levels are associated with increased risk for RS virus, as well as developing asthma and diabetes 1 later in life. Besides supplementing the infant, the breastfeeding mother is recommended to take a dose of 4000 IU so the infant gets adequate levels.
Children with a low vitamin D present with a higher incidence of fractures from normal activities, they are at risk for diabetes type 1.
Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDAs) for Vitamin D and tolerable upper intake levels are all far below the dosages considered to be harmful. The tables below show these doses. These are doses recommended for healthy people. Taking the lower limit is sufficient during the summer (fall and spring depends on latitude) for healthy individuals not in a risk group. The upper intake levels are appropriate for risk groups. Individuals who have already a deficiency, require in some cases even higher levels to correct, treat och prevent D vitamin deficiency and should be monitored by a physician.
The following table shows the range of vitamin D which can be safely taken based on age. The list shows different alternatives for strength depending on how the manufacturer measures the D vitamin. Vitamins should be taken from september through April, and earlier if the summer is rainy and cloudy.
What can be confusing is how different articles discuss different measurements of D vitamin: IU is the international unit while μgm (mcg) is microgram. (400 IU = 10 μgm = 10 mcg).
0 -6 months the daily dosage should be between 400-1000 IU or 10-25 μgm (mcg)
7 months to 1 year: 400-1500 IU (IE) or 10-38 μgm (mcg)
1-3 years 600-2500 IU (IE) or 15-63 μgm (mcg)
4-8 years 600-3000 IU (IE) or 15-75 μgm (mcg)
9-18 years 600-4000 IU (IE) or 15- 100 μgm (mcg)
adults 2500-4000 IU (IE) or 63 – 100 μgm (mcg)
women who are pregnant or lactating 600-4000 IU or 15-100 μgm (mcg).
An important study published in 2017 provides research to support increased daily recommendations for D vitamin in all age groups.
When is D-vitamin too much or too little?
Experts in Endocrinology express the following opinion ” vitamin D deficiency is very common in all age groups — essentially everyone is at risk”. Our main source of D vitamin is through sunlight exposure directly to the skin during the summer. Vitamin D is otherwise available in only a few foods and as a supplement. In northern latitudes, particularly Scandinavia, there is a risk for not meeting your daily requirements depending on the weather. From September through April D vitamin needs to be supplemented due to the northern latitude and lack of exposure to the sun. Vitamin D is most well know for its role with calcium for skeletal health, building strong bones! Vitamin D has other important functions including enhancing and supporting the immune system, regulating cell growth and proliferation, reducing inflammation and neuromuscular health. There are a wealth of studies focusing on the link between D vitamin deficiency and cancer, depression, cardiovascular disease, MS, infections, inflammatory diseases and diabetes.
The best way to measure D vitamin in the body is under discussion, but experts agree that a serum 25(OH)D levels <75 nmol/L may be too low for safety and associated with higher all-cause mortality. There is a call to all health care professionals to promote intake levels corresponding to those proposed by the Endocrine Society Expert Committee (2011) as safe upper tolerable daily intake doses for patients at risk for vitamin D deficiency (<50 nmol/L): 2000 IU for those <1 year of age, 4000 IU for those aged 1-18 years, and 10 000 IU for those aged >18 years (Papadimitriou, 2017).
Can patients get too much vitamin D?
Too much vitamin D can be toxic, but is very rare. Studies investigating toxicity all involved daily consumption of over 40000 IU (1000 mcg) per day. Immediate symptoms of toxicity are abdominal cramps, nausea and vomiting. Symptoms can otherwise be due to an underlying magnesium deficiency. Vitamin D toxicity can be determined by a blood test. The first sign is hypercalcemia, a high level of calcium in the urine. There are some health conditions which affect how the body metabolizes vitamin D and calcium, particularly hyperparathyroidism or kidney disease. People with these health conditions should be under supervision when taking D vitamin supplements.
Överdosering.
Tillskott med D-vitamin har länge hämmats av en rädsla för överdosering. Denna rädsla har nu visat sig vara kraftigt överdriven. Omvandlingen till den aktiva formen sker i flera steg vilket är en inbyggd säkerhetsmekanism. I studier har dosbehov och säkerhet undersökts. Dessa talar för att 100 mikrogram (=4.000 IE) vitamin D3/dag ger tillfredsställande nivåer utan biverkningsrisk. Jämför detta med livsmedelsverkets rekommendation på 400 IE per dag som alltså bara utgör 10% av optimal dos. Referens: www.lakartidningen.se/engine.php?articleId=6