Severely vitamin D-deficient athletes present smaller hearts than sufficient athletes
European Journal of Preventive Cardiology January 7, 2014 2047487313518473
Richard J Allison 1,2
Graeme L Close 2
Abdulaziz Farooq 3
Nathan R Riding 2,3
Othman Salah 4
Bruce Hamilton 5
Mathew G Wilson 4
1 National Sports Medicine Program, ASPETAR, Qatar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, Qatar
2 Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Science, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, Merseyside, UK
3 Athlete Health and Performance Research Centre, ASPETAR, Qatar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital Qatar
4 Department of Sports Medicine, ASPETAR, Qatar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, Qatar
5 High Performance Sport New Zealand, Auckland, New Zealand
Richard Allison, ASPETAR – Qatar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, PO Box 29222, Doha, Qatar. Email: richard.allison at aspetar.com
Background Vitamin D (25(OH)D) deficiency has associations with bowl/colon cancer, arthritis, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. Many athletes are vitamin D deficient, yet no studies have examined the association between 25(OH)D status and cardiac structure and function in healthy athletes.
Design A total of 506 national-level athletes [football (50%), handball (23%), volleyball (16%), and basketball (11%)] and 244 control participants presented for precompetition medical assessment. Controls were healthy individuals registered with a sporting federation undertaking <2 h of exercise per week.
Methods All individuals undertook a physical examination, 12-lead electrocardiogram, echocardiogram, and serum 25(OH)D evaluation.
Results From 506 athletes and 244 controls,
- 23 and 12.3% demonstrated 25(OH)D sufficiency (>30 ng/ml),
- 30 and 23.4% insufficiency (20–30 ng/ml),
- 37.2 and 48.8% deficiency (10–20 ng/ml), and
- 11 and 15.6% severe deficiency (<10 ng/ml).
Severely 25(OH)D-deficient athletes present significantly (p < 0.05) smaller
- aortic root and left atria diameters,
- intraventricular septum diameter (IVSd),
- left ventricular diameter during diastole (LVIDd),
- left ventricular mass (LVM),
- left ventricular volume during diastole (LVvolD), and
- right atrial (RA) area than insufficient and sufficient athletes.
Furthermore, following logarithmic transformation adjusting 25(OH)D for age, body surface area, ethnicity, and athletic participation, positive associations were observed between 25(OH)D and IVSd, LVIDd, posterior wall thickness during diastole, LVM, and LVvolD in athletes but not in the control participants.
Conclusions Severely 25(OH)D-deficient athletes present significantly smaller cardiac structural parameters than insufficient and sufficient athletes. Future research should investigate the precise mechanism(s) causing cardiac hypertrophy with increases in serum 25(OH)D in healthy athletes.
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Comment by VitaminDWiki
Most likely the athletes with < 10 ng of vitamin D were indoor athletes, as outdoor athletes typically have > 30 ng of vitamin D
This is the first article I can recall which implies that the heart does not grow as much when there is little vitamin D.
See also VitaminDWiki
- The Big D (an editorial in American Journal of Sports Medicine) – Jan 2014
- Nutritional deficiencies of seasoned athletes (vitamin D is 2nd) – Aug 2013
- Elite outdoor athletes had 52 ng of vitamin D – March 2013
- Virtually all basketball players and dancers had less than 30 ng - Sept 2010 file
- Another outdoor sport produces more bone than indoor sport – vitamin D Sept 2010
- Overview Cardiovascular and vitamin D
- All items in category Shut-in Vitamin D
39 items - Overview Sports and vitamin D has the following summary
Athletes are helped by vitamin D by:
- Faster reaction time
- Far fewer colds/flus during the winter
- Less sore/tired after a workout
- Fewer micro-cracks and broken bones
- Bones which do break heal much more quickly
- Increased VO2 and exercise endurance Feb 2011
- Indoor athletes especially need vitamin D
- Professional indoor athletes are starting to take vitamin D and/or use UV beds
- Olympic athletes have used UV/vitamin D since the 1930's
- The biggest gain from the use of vitamin D is by those who exercise less than 2 hours per day.
- Reduced muscle fatigue with 10,000 IU vitamin D daily
- Muscle strength improved when vitamin D added: 3 Meta-analysis
- Reduced Concussions
See also: Sports and Vitamin D category282 items Athletes (national-level) with less than 10 ng of vitamin D had smaller hearts – Jan 201413675 visitors, last modified 09 Mar, 2015, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)