Vitamin D Meeting in Washington DC - Dec 2014

Vitamin D: Moving Toward Evidence-based Decision Making in Primary Care

Dec 2, 3 2014
Summary notes by VitaminDWiki

  • There may be a problem for vitamin D levels > 50 ng
  • People need a lot more vitamin D than they are getting
  • Controversey as to how much - little conversation about basing dose size on weight
  • Groups who are at high risk of being deficient - they acknowledge only elderly, blacks, excessive clothes so far
  • Testing inaccuracy continues to be a big problem
  • Blacks need a lower level than whites - continues to be a controversy
  • Genes are important, and vitamin D deficiency can be inherited
  • Virtually no discussion on importance of cofactors

Day 1 Video    Day 2 video with discussion

A few of the thousands of images from the event

Older skin does not produce as much vitamin D

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Purda around the world

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U shaped risk - more in blacks

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Dose-Response Whites vs AA 2014

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Conclusion - same amount of supplementation for AA

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VDP papers versus year peak in 1983, and again now

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AA vitamin D vs latitude and binding protein - unpublished

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VDBP in AA and whites

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Vitamin D status is Heritable - more than gene analysis show

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DBP - whites seem to have more

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Testosterone increase with higher vitamin D - not published yet

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Prostate Cancer U shaped - conclusions

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Mortality Ushaped

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PTH test results vary even within Seattle

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Differences between test results

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Test differences

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See also VitaminDWiki

See also web

  • Primary care physicians face vitamin D conundrum Family Practice News on the conference “I don’t know.”
    That’s what family physician Michael L. LeFevre tells patients who ask him
    if they should be screened for vitamin D levels or if they could benefit from vitamin D supplementation.
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