Population vitamin D stores are increasing in Tasmania and this is associated with less BMD loss over 10 years
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2021 Mar 30;dgab197. doi: 10.1210/clinem/dgab197
Michael Thompson 1, Dawn Aitken 1, Saliu Balogun 1, Flavia Cicuttini 1, Graeme Jones 1
Vitamin D level in Tasmania over 10 years: 21 ng ==> 25 ng
- Low vitamin D associated with 5.5X increased risk of low bone mineral density – March 2013
- Hypothesis: increased bone mineral density needs protein, Ca, Mg, Vitamin D and K
- Bone Mineral Density increased by Resveratrol (which activates the Vitamin D Receptor) – RCT Nov 2020
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See also
- Overviews: Osteoporosis, Fractures, Rickets Dental Hair
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16 articles are in both Bone and Magnesium categories 29 articles are in both Bone and Vitamin K2 categories 18 articles are in both Bone and Sports categories 8 articles are in both Bone and Meta-analysis categories 25 articles are in both Fractures and Meta-analysis categories - Healthy bones need: Calcium, Vitamin D, Magnesium, Silicon, Vitamin K, and Boron – 2012
- VitaminDWiki pages with BONE MINERAL DENSITY or BMD in title 25 pages as of Feb 2023
- Hearing loss is associated with soft bones in ear
- Perhaps prevented and treated by Vitamin D
- See also Overview of Rickets and Vitamin D Overview Osteoporosis and vitamin D
Introduction: Vitamin D deficiency is a common, modifiable determinant of musculoskeletal health. There are limited data that examine the longitudinal change in population 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) and none that evaluate the long-term skeletal outcomes of longitudinal vitamin D status.
Methods: Prospective cohort analysis of community-dwelling adults aged 50-80 years who had 25(OH)D assessed by radioimmunoassay and BMD by DXA at baseline (n=1096), 2.5 (n=870) and 10 (n=565) years. Sun exposure was quantified by questionnaire and supplement use at clinic review. 25(OH)D <50nmol/L was considered deficient. Participants were provided with their 25(OH)D results.
Results: Over 10 years 25(OH)D increased (52.2 ± 17.0 to 63.5 ± 23.6 nmol/L, p<0.001).
- Participants with baseline deficiency had larger 25(OH)D increases than baseline sufficient participants (19.2 ± 25.3 vs 1.6 ± 23.3 nmol/L, p<0.001).
- Longitudinal change in 25(OH)D was associated with baseline summer (β=1.46, p<0.001) and winter (β=1.29, p=0.003) sun exposure, change in summer (β=1.27, p=0.002) and winter (β=1.47, p<0.001) sun exposure and vitamin D supplement use (β=25.0 - 33.0, p<0.001).
- Persistent vitamin D sufficiency was associated with less BMD loss at the femoral neck (β=0.020, p=0.027), lumbar spine (β=0.033, p=0.003) and total hip (β=0.023, p=0.021) compared to persistent vitamin D deficiency.
- Achieving vitamin D sufficiency was associated with less BMD loss at the lumbar spine (β=0.045, p<0.001) compared to persistent vitamin D deficiency.
Conclusions: Population 25(OH)D concentration increased due to a combination of increased sun exposure and supplement use. Maintaining or achieving vitamin D sufficiency was associated with less BMD loss over 10 years.
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