Naked Science Forum
Life Sciences => Physiology & Medicine => Topic started by: Carolyn on 29/01/2010 11:30:01
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Carolyn asked the Naked Scientists:
I have read online that Vitamin D3 supplement is needed during winter months when sunlight is a rare commodity and was wondering if this is a valid claim?
What do you think?
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We obtain the majority of our vitamin D3 from the sunshine (90-95%), specifically UVB and heat converts a by-product of cholesterol into vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol). According to research from Canada1, UVB light is too weak between September and March for vitamin D3 to be created at a latitude of 52o and above - e.g. Birmingham, UK.
During this period your vitamin D3 level (calculated by measuring the blood content of 25-hydroxy-vitamin-D or 25(OH)D) may drop between 10-15 ng/ml2.
Depending on your vitamin D3 level in September and your chosen vitamin D sufficiency level (typically 20-30 ng/ml), you may need supplementation (most people in England and almost all of Scotland appear to be below 30 by March2). As a rough guide is 100 IU/d is approximately 1 ng/ml.
That's the long answer.
The short answer is Yes and at least 1,500 IU/d.
1. Webb, A. R., Kline, L. & Holick, M. F. Influence of season and latitude on the cutaneous synthesis of vitamin d3: Exposure to winter sunlight in boston and edmonton will not promote vitamin d3 synthesis in human skin. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 67, 373-378 (1988). URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jcem-67-2-373.
2. Hyppönen, E. & Power, C. Hypovitaminosis d in british adults at age 45 y: nationwide cohort study of dietary and lifestyle predictors. The American journal of clinical nutrition 85, 860-868 (2007). URL http://www.ajcn.org/content/85/3/860.abstract.