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Colds substantially reduced by Vitamin D or UV during military training – Jan 2021

Influence of Vitamin D Supplementation by Simulated Sunlight or Oral D3 on Respiratory Infection during Military Training

Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise: doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000002604
Harrison, Sophie E.1; Oliver, Samuel J.1; Kashi, Daniel S.1,2; Carswell, Alexander T.1,3; Edwards, Jason P.1,2; Wentz, Laurel M.1,4; Roberts, Ross1; Tang, Jonathan C. Y.3; Izard, Rachel M.5,6; Jackson, Sarah7; Allan, Donald8; Rhodes, Lesley E.9; Fraser, William D.3,10; Greeves, Julie P.3,7,11; Walsh, Neil P.2

VitaminDWiki

1,000 IU of vitamin D daily for 4 weeks then 400 IU daily for 8 weeks

Note by VitaminDWiki:
  probably get similar benefit by taking a 50,000 IU capsule once a month

Increasing the dose frequency to bi-weekly has been proven to prevent/treat 18 other health problems and is expected to reduce incidence of COVID-19

 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki
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Purpose
To determine the relationship between vitamin D status and upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) of physically active men and women across seasons (study 1). Then, to investigate the effects on URTI and mucosal immunity of achieving vitamin D sufficiency (25(OH)D ≥50 nmol·L-1) by a unique comparison of safe, simulated-sunlight or oral D3 supplementation in winter (study 2).

Methods
In study 1, 1,644 military recruits were observed across basic military training. In study 2, a randomized controlled trial, 250 men undertaking military training received either placebo, simulated-sunlight (1.3x standard erythemal dose, three-times-per-week for 4-weeks and then once-per-week for 8-weeks) or oral vitamin D3 (1,000 IU·day-1 for 4-weeks and then 400 IU·day-1 for 8-weeks). URTI was diagnosed by physician (study 1) and Jackson common cold questionnaire (study 2). Serum 25(OH)D, salivary secretory immunoglobulin A (SIgA) and cathelicidin were assessed by LC-MS/MS and ELISA.

Results
In study 1, only 21% of recruits were vitamin D sufficient during winter. Vitamin D sufficient recruits were 40% less likely to suffer URTI than recruits with 25(OH)D <50 nmol·L-1 (OR (95% CI) = 0.6 (0.4–0.9)); an association that remained after accounting for sex and smoking. Each URTI caused on average 3 missed training days. In study 2, vitamin D supplementation strategies were similarly effective to achieve vitamin D sufficiency in almost all (≥95%). Compared to placebo, vitamin D supplementation reduced the severity of peak URTI symptoms by 15% and days with URTI by 36% (P < 0.05). These reductions were similar with both vitamin D strategies (P > 0.05). Supplementation did not affect salivary SIgA or cathelicidin.

Conclusion
Vitamin D sufficiency reduced the URTI burden during military training.


Created by admin. Last Modification: Monday January 25, 2021 01:24:32 GMT-0000 by admin. (Version 4)

Attached files

ID Name Comment Uploaded Size Downloads
14914 Oral UV.jpg admin 25 Jan, 2021 132.33 Kb 445
14913 Vitamin D, Simulated Sunlight RTI, military.pdf admin 24 Jan, 2021 2.17 Mb 449