Information about causes of low vitamin d





 

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Print This Page Home > Press Releases > 2008
LOW VITAMIN D LEVELS POSE LARGE THREAT TO HEALTH
================================================

Johns Hopkins Medicine
Media Relations and Public Affairs
Media contact: David March
410-955-1534; dmarch1@jhmi.edu
August 11, 2008
-- Overall 26 percent increased risk of death

Researchers at Johns Hopkins are reporting what is believed to be the
most conclusive evidence to date that inadequate levels of vitamin D,
obtained from milk, fortified cereals and exposure to sunlight, lead
to substantially increased risk of death.
In a study set to appear in the Archives of Internal Medicine online
Aug. 11, the Johns Hopkins team analyzed a diverse sample of 13,000
initially healthy men and women participating in an ongoing national
health survey and compared the risk of death between those with the
lowest blood levels of vitamin D to those with higher amounts. An
unhealthy deficiency, experts say, is considered blood levels of 17.8
nanograms per milliliter or lower.

Of the 1,800 study participants known to have died by Dec. 31, 2000,
nearly 700 died from some form of heart disease, with 400 of these
being deficient in vitamin D. This translates overall to an estimated
26 percent increased risk of any death, though the number of deaths
from heart disease alone was not large enough to meet scientific
criteria to resolve that it was due to low vitamin D levels.
Yet, researchers say it does highlight a trend, with other studies
linking shortages of vitamin D to increased rates of breast cancer and
depression in the elderly. And earlier published findings by the team,
from the same national study, have established a possible tie-in,
showing an 80 percent increased risk of peripheral artery disease from
vitamin D deficits.

Researchers note that other studies in the last year or so in animals
and humans have identified a connection between low levels of vitamin
D and heart disease. But these studies, they say, were weakened by
small sample numbers, lack of diversity in the population studied and
other factors that limited scientists’ ability to generalize the
findings to the public at large.
“Our results make it much more clear that all men and women concerned
about their overall health should more closely monitor their blood
levels of vitamin D, and make sure they have enough,” says study
co-lead investigator Erin Michos, M.D., M.H.S.

“We think we have additional evidence to consider adding vitamin D
deficiency as a distinct and separate risk factor for death from
cardiovascular disease, putting it alongside much better known and
understood risk factors, such as age, gender, family history, smoking,
high blood cholesterol levels, high blood pressure, lack of exercise,
obesity and diabetes,” says Michos. Vitamin D is well known to play an
essential role in cell growth, in boosting the body’s immune system
and in strengthening bones.
“Now that we know vitamin D deficiency is a risk factor, we can better
assess how aggressively to treat people at risk of heart disease or
those who are already ill and undergoing treatment,” says Michos, who
adds that test screening for nutrient levels is relatively simple. It
can, she says, be made part of routine blood work and done while
monitoring other known risk factors, including blood pressure, glucose
and lipid levels.

Heart disease remains the nation’s leading cause of death, killing
more than a million Americans each year. Nearly 10 percent of those
with the condition have not one identifiable, traditional risk factor,
which the experts say is why a considerable extent of the disease goes
unexplained.
Michos, an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine and its Heart and Vascular Institute, recommends that
people boost their vitamin D levels by eating diets rich in such fish
as sardines and mackerel, consuming fortified dairy products, taking
cod-liver oil and vitamin supplements, and in warmer weather briefly
exposing skin to the sun’s vitamin-D producing ultraviolet light.

Aware of the cancer risks linked to too much time spent in the sun,
she says as little as 10 to 15 minutes of daily exposure to the sun
can produce sufficient amounts of vitamin D to sustain health. The
hormone-like nutrient controls blood levels of calcium and phosphorus,
essential chemicals in the body.
If vitamin supplements are used, Michos says there is no evidence that
more than 2,000 international units per day do any good. Study results
show that heart disease death rates flattened out in participants with
the highest vitamin D levels (above 50 nanograms per milliliter of
blood), signaling a possible loss of the vitamin’s protective effects
at too-high doses.

The U.S. Institute of Medicine suggests that an adequate daily intake
of vitamin D is between 200 and 400 international units (or blood
levels nearing 30 nanograms per milliliter). Previous results from the
same nationwide survey showed that 41 percent of men and 53 percent of
women are technically deficient in the nutrient, with vitamin D levels
below 28 nanograms per milliliter.
Michal Melamed, M.D., M.H.S., study co-lead investigator who started
the research as a clinical fellow at Johns Hopkins, says no one knows
yet why or how vitamin D’s hormone-like properties may protect the
heart, but she adds that there are plenty of leads in the better known
links the vitamin has to problems with muscle overgrowth and high
blood pressure, in addition to its control of inflammation, which
scientists are showing plays a stronger role in all kinds of heart
disease. But more research is needed to determine the nutrient’s
precise biological action.

Researchers say their next steps are to test various high doses of
vitamin D to find out if the nutritional supplementation results in
fewer deaths and lower incidence of heart disease, including heart
attack or moments of prolonged and severe chest pain.
The team also plans to investigate what biological triggers, such as
obesity or hypertension, might offset or worsen the action of vitamin
D on heart muscle, or whether vitamin D sets off some other reaction
in the heart.

Melamed says that because vitamin D levels are known to fluctuate in
direct proportion with daily physical activity, the growing epidemic
of obesity and indoor sedentary lifestyles lend more urgency to act on
the vitamin D factor.
Funding for this study was provided by the National Institutes of
Health, the P.J. Schafer Cardiovascular Research Fund and the Paul
Beeson Physician Faculty Scholars in Aging Program. Michos has
received previous consulting fees from vitamin D therapeutics
manufacturer Abbott Pharmaceuticals. The terms of these arrangements
are being managed by the Johns Hopkins University in accordance with
its conflict of interest policies.

Besides Michos and Melamed, other Hopkins researchers involved in this
study, conducted solely at Hopkins, were Wendy Post, M.D.; and Brad
Astor, Ph.D. Melamed is now an assistant professor at the Albert
Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University in New York City.
For additional information, go to:
http://www.hopkinsheart.org/
http://archinte.ama-assn.org/

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