Vitamin D Deficiency in Scotland. Right to be informed 80% Vitamin D deficient of Scottish...
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Transcript of Vitamin D Deficiency in Scotland. Right to be informed 80% Vitamin D deficient of Scottish...
Vitamin D
Deficiency in Scotland
Right to be
informed
80%
Vitamin Ddeficient
of Scottish Population
Many diseases linked to low
vitamin DRickets - osteomalacia - muscle weakness - depression - dementia - infections - multiple sclerosis - osteoporosis - fractures - cancer prevention - cancer progression - diabetes - cardio-vascular disease - falls - tuberculosis - inflammatory bowel disease
Helga RheinGP
Sighthill Health CentreEdinburgh
February 2013
1. Vitamin D’s function2. Deficiency3. Scottish average levels4. Linked diseases5. Solutions
What is vitamin D?
Nutrient produced in skin exposed to
sunfish, supplements
Modern findings - last decade:•transformation in the body in several steps into a powerful hormone (this is different from all other vitamins)•in addition to bone health:
immune system, up- and down regulation of genes insulin productioninfluence on cancer cells...
•vitamin D receptor in every organ•organs only in best running order if sufficient vitamin D•optimal levels around 4 times as much or above
Normal natural blood levels of outdoor workers: around 120 nmol/l Barger-Lux, US, 120 nmol/l, 2002. Binkley, Hawaian surfers, 80 nmol/l 2007, Aydin, Turkish children, 180 nmol/l, 2010. Rajasree, Indian fishermen 270 nmol/l, 1999. Luxwolda, traditional living populations East Africa, 115 nmol/l 2012
Maximal calcium absorption: above 80-90 nmol/lHeaney, 2005
adequate blood level
Normal Outdoor workers
120 nmol/l
UKold guidelines 25 nmol/l
Most vitamin D experts
100 nmol/l
CompromiseWHO 2003,
US Institute of Medicine 2010
50 nmol/l as Edinburgh Royal Infirmary
Scotland’s levels?
.
Hyppönen et al 2007
<40 nmol/L
7437 participants, aged 45
Edinburgh University study: 84% < 50 nmol/l(Zgaga, 2011, - 2230 participants, Scotland-wide, aged 21-80)
Aberdeen 100% < 50 nmol/l(Macdonald et al, 2009, 338 post-menopausal women)
My practice: 70 % < 50 nmol/l(of 350 people tested by May 2011)
Scottish Problems:
Northern latitude 55º - 60ºClouds, WindClothes
INDOOR LIVING + WORKINGSunscreen Avoidance of midday sun
Diseases linked to low
levels
1. Rickets
2. Infections, pre-eclampsia, pre-term birth
3. MS, autism, schizophrenia....
Pooled analysis of observed/expected births in people with multiple sclerosis in Canadian, British, Danish, and Swedish studies (n=42 045) with 95% confidence intervals.
Willer C J et al. BMJ 2005;330:120
©2005 by British Medical Journal Publishing Group
MS
Staples, 2010, BMJAustralia1524 patients with MS born in Australiafrom a total population of 2,648,779
MS
“Thus, there are now innumerable, experimental, epidemiological, immunological, genetic and clinical arguments in support of the notion that vitamin D insufficiency is one of the risk factors for MS.....”
Pierrot-Deseilligny C, Souberbielle JC. Contribution of vitamin D insufficiency to the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis published online 23 January 2013 Therapeutic Advances in Neurological Disorders
Many diseases linked to low
vitamin DRickets - osteomalacia - muscle weakness - depression - dementia - infections - multiple sclerosis - osteoporosis - fractures - cancer prevention - cancer progression - diabetes - cardio-vascular disease - falls - tuberculosis - inflammatory bowel disease
???
Vacec 2011, 10,899 patientsnormal (≥75 nmol/l) or deficient (<75 nmol/l).“In conclusion, vitamin D deficiency was associated with a significant risk of cardiovascular disease and reduced survival. Vitamin D supplementation was significantly associated with better survival, specifically in patients with documented deficiency.”
CVD
Jenar et al. BMJ 2010: 520 000 participants from 10 western European countries1248 cases of incident colorectal cancer and 1248 controls
“.....patients in the highest quintile had a 40% lower risk of colorectal cancer than did those in the lowest quintile”
Cancer
Kaplan–Meier survival curves (ie, free of cancer) for the3 random treatment groups in the cohort of women free of cancerat 1 year of intervention (N 1/4 1,085). Sample sizes are 266 for placebo,416 for calcium only, and 403 for calcium plus vitamin D. The survivalat the end of study for the Ca+D group is significantly higher than thatfor placebo, by logistic regression. (Copyright Robert P. Heaney, 2006)
Lappe 2009: approx 1000 white women, good baseline vit D levels, supplemented with either a modest amount of vit D, or Calcium + same amount Vit D, or placebo
Cancer
Hepatogastroenterology. 2013 Jan 9;60(126). doi: 10.5754/hge121003. [Epub ahead of print]
Tumor-suppressive effects of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 in gastric cancer cells.Bao A, Li Y, Tong Y, Zheng H, Wu W, Wei C.Abstract
It has been previously demonstrated that vitamin D acts as a prognostic indicator of gastric cancer and may be correlated with the incidence risk of gastric cancer. However, the effect of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 on the apoptosis of human gastric cancer cells is unclear. The aim of this study was to determine whether 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 induced the cellular apoptosis of BGC-823 gastric cancer cells and to determine the potential mechanism of action. We demonstrate that 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 induced the apoptosis of gastric cancer cells via the processing of PARP and cleavage of caspase 3. Additionally, an increase in BAX expression and a decrease in ERK1/2 and AKT phosphorylation were associated with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3-induced apoptosis. The mRNA expression levels of VDR, CYP24A1, and p21 were increased significantly following 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 treatment. These findings suggest that 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 exerts tumor-suppressive effects on BGC-823 human gastric cancer cells.
Cancer
Cancer
May 2010: 7,358 Cardio-vascular patients. Lowest levels, below 37 nmol/l were nearly 3 times more likely to develop depression compared to highest levels of above 125 nmol/l.
Mental Health
Maddock J et al.Vitamin D and common mental disorders in mid-life: cross-sectional and prospective findings.Clinical Nutrition, Jan 2013
7,401 participantsUK
aged 455 years later
higher vitamin D = less risk of depression
Mental Health
Randomised controlled trial: Jorde 2008: Effects of vitamin D supplementation on symptoms of depression in overweight and obese subjects.In the two groups given vitamin D, but not in the placebo group, there was a significant improvement in BDI scores after 1 year.
Systematic review: Anglin R et al. 2013. Vitamin D deficiency and depression in adults. Twice as likely to be depressed if vitamin D low.
Mental Health
Umhau, 2013: Of 500 suicides in US military service members : those with lowest vit D - <37 nmol/l - had highest risk “It may be that in a young, sometimes aggressive population such as military, impulsivity plays more of a role than depression in risk for suicide...”
Suicide rates: US: 12 per 100,000 (2010)England: 11 per 100,000 (2006)Scotland: 19.8 per 100,000 (2006)
Scots aged 15-44 double the rate compared to English counterparts
Mental Health
Berry et al, July 2011. Vitamin D status has a linear association with seasonal infections and lung function in British adults. British Journal of Nutrition
6789 participantsUK45-year oldsJuly 2011
Colds and flu
“...vitamin D significantly reduces the respiratory tract infection...”
10 mcg/day to 50 mcg/day1/3 less colds, coughs, flus, pneumonia
Charan,, JC. et al. Vitamin D for prevention of respiratory tract infections: A systematic review and meta-analysis. J Pharmacol Pharmacother. 2012 Oct-Dec; 3(4): 300–303.
Colds and flu
Autier 2007 Meta-analysis of 18 randomised placebo controlled trials 57,000 participants 7.5 - 50 mcg daily
7% reduction in mortality
Bjelakovic 2011Cochrane Systematic Review: 50 randomised placebo controlled trials 94,148 participants
6% reduction in mortality
All cause mortality
20 - 30 % of Scottish peopleseverely deficient and
symptomatic:
tiredachy legs and back
low moodfrequent colds
wait few months for improvement
•Country starved of a nutrient.•Much greater importance than previously thought •Linked to all kinds of diseases
Scottish ailments: •MS •Depression, suicides •Cancer incidence and mortality •Cardio-vascular disease•Total mortality
Vitamin D is cheap and safe.
What can we do?
information website: www.scots4vitd
What else can we do?
One day exposedin sunshine:
250 mcg
Ferguson installed tanning booths so United players could top up their Vitamin D levelsPUBLISHED: 08:56, 19 December 2012 | UPDATED: 13:41, 19 December 2012
10 mcg to all babies, starting after birth25 mcg for children aged 1 to 1850 mcg for all adults over 1850 mcg for pregnant women (25 mcg for pregnant women aged 14 -18)
Holick MF, Binkley NC, Bischoff-Ferrari HA, Gordon CM, Hanley DA, Heaney RP, M. Murad H, Weaver CM. Evaluation, Treatment, and Prevention of Vitamin D Deficiency: an Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline. J Clin Endocrinol Metab, July 2011, 96(7)
10 mcg is sufficient for a
baby
but not for a 20 - 30 times heavier adult
‘10 mcg is not enough’
In our practice on prescription to all:
Adults, Teenagers over 12:
weekly 500 mcg (= 20,000 IU)
Children aged 5 - 12: daily 25 mcg (= 1,000 IU)
Children aged 0 - 5: daily 10 mcg (= 400 IU)
Pregnant women: daily 50 mcg (= 2,000 IU)
When living in Scotland: take vitamin D
50 -100 mcg daily (Adults)
Read up on rare conditions when you should not take vitamin D or check with your doctor