Relationships between Vitamin D3 and Metabolic Syndrome
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16(2), 175; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16020175
Sylwia Wieder-Huszla 1, Anna Jurczak 1, Małgorzata Szkup 2, Katarzyna Barczak 3, Barbara Dołęgowska 4, Daria Schneider-Matyka 2, Joanna Owsianowska 1 and Elżbieta Grochans 2,
Items in both categories Metabolic Syndrome and Women are listed here:
- Metabolic Syndrome 3.5 X more likely if both Vitamin D and Estrogen are low (senior women)– June 2019
- Metabolic Syndrome associated with low vitamin D in abdominal obese women – Jan 2019
- Half of Women Over 50 Desperately Need This Potent Nutrient (Vitamin D) – April 2018
- Metabolic syndrome 1.9 X more likely if senior women had less than 30 ng of Vitamin D – Oct 2017
- Metabolic syndrome 2.4 X more likely if senior women had low vitamin D – Nov 2013
All items in categories Metabolic Syndrome AND Obesity
- Metabolic Syndromes fought by Vitamin D in 6 ways – Oct 2023
- UV reduces cardiovascular and metabolic problems– Vitamin D plus Nitric oxide – Sept 2023
- Magnesium in Obesity, Metabolic Syndrome, and Type 2 Diabetes - Jan 2021
- The Role of Magnesium in the Pathogenesis of Metabolic Disorders – April 2022
- Vitamin D is linked to metabolic syndrome and obesity – Aug 2019
- Metabolic Syndrome associated with low vitamin D in abdominal obese women – Jan 2019
- Obesity and Vitamin D – Review July 2018
- How Omega-3 fights metabolic syndrome and weight – Feb 2018
- BMI reduced by Vitamin D (not much reduction – only got VitD to 26 ng) – RCT Feb 2018
- Waist size reduced 3 cm by Vitamin D in those with Metabolic Syndrome – Jan 2017
- Metabolic Syndrome with and without obesity has low vitamin D - Oct 2016
- Obese youths 2X less likely to develop Metabolic Syndrome if take Omega-3 – RCT April 2016
- Hypothesis: Energy metabolism is associated with Vitamin D – April 2015
- Diabetic hypertension reduced with Vitamin D and Calcium – RCT March 2015
- UV (perhaps Nitric Oxide) better than vitamin D at preventing obesity in rats on a high-fat diet – Nov 2014
- Hypothesis- Metabolic disease is due to Tissue Renin-Angiotensin Systems – Feb 2014
- UV better than vitamin D in reducing metabolic syndrome in mice – Thesis Aug 2013
- Metabolic Syndrome 10% less likely for every 4 ng increase in Vitamin D – Jan 2013
- 5700 IU vitamin D improved various growth factors in overweight people – Oct 2012
- 3X more abdominal obesity among Korean children having low vitamin D – July 2012
- Overview Metabolic Syndrome and vitamin D
 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki
The growing number of overweight and obese individuals is an alarming global problem; these conditions are risk factors for the development of health problems such as metabolic syndrome (MetS), type-2 diabetes, atherosclerosis, and cardiovascular disease. Numerous studies have suggested that vitamin D3 deficiency plays a role in the pathogenesis of MetS. The aim of this study was to analyze the relationship between MetS and vitamin D3 levels in women. Laboratory analysis demonstrated that only 26.89% of the participants had vitamin D3 levels close to normal, and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) measurements revealed android obesity in 75.63% of the women. The menstruating women more often suffered from vitamin D3 deficiency, and less often had elevated vitamin D3 levels.
The conclusions are as follows: (1) There were no statistically significant relationships between vitamin D3 levels and MetS parameters, namely the level of triglycerides, the levels of low- and high-density lipoproteins (LDL and HDL), the level of total cholesterol, and systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP).
Vitamin D deficiency was only observed in the women with abdominal obesity. (2) Low vitamin D3 levels were typical of perimenopausal women. Age was a variable correlating with vitamin D. (3) The presence of menstrual cycles was an important contributor to vitamin D levels. Vitamin D deficiency was significantly more common in the menstruating women.