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Monday,
April 07, 2003
Experts: Babies should get vitamin D supplement
All infants, particularly those who are breastfed, should be
given vitamin D to help prevent rickets, a potentially crippling
condition in which the bones fail to grow straight and strong,
the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) announced Monday.
- 2003/04/07
While breast milk is the best nutrition for babies, it may not
contain enough vitamin D to meet babies' needs, particularly when
youngsters are protected from sunlight, a natural source of the
vitamin. All infant formula sold in the U.S. contains added vitamin
D, but if a baby drinks less than 500 milliliters (17 ounces)
of formula each day they should also receive supplements, according
to the AAP. Vitamin D supplements are also recommended in children
and teens who do not drink at least 500 milliliters each day of
milk fortified with vitamin D, according to the guidelines published
in Monday's issue of the journal Pediatrics. Supplements of vitamin
D come in liquid form, and just a few drops in the baby's mouth
before nursing will give a child all the vitamin D he or she needs,
Dr. Lawrence M. Gartner of the AAP and the University of Chicago
told Reuters Health. Supplementation should begin within the first
two months of life, and achieve an intake of 200 International
Units (IU) of vitamin D per day. Gartner added that certain shifts
in society have likely contributed to this apparent paradox, in
which the milk that nature produces specifically for babies does
not provide them with enough of a needed vitamin. Sunlight is
a major source of vitamin D, he noted, and early humans likely
had skin that was better suited to their environment, which enabled
them to spend enough time in the sunlight to make lots of vitamin
D without worrying about skin cancer. Today, however, the picture
is quite different, Gartner said. Nowadays, he explained, humans
have moved all over the world, often to places where their skin
no longer matches their environment. Furthermore, the depletion
of the ozone has forced humans to use sunscreen to protect themselves
from sunlight's ultraviolet rays, Gartner said, and sunscreen
also prevents the skin from using sunlight to make vitamin D.
Vitamin D supplementation for infants "is a fairly simple,
and quite safe, adaptation," Gartner noted. "Just give
the babies a little bit of vitamin D, and they won't get rickets,"
he added. Breastfeeding, although imperfect, is still best for
babies, Gartner noted. Numerous studies have linked nursing to
a host of health benefits, such as higher IQ and a lower risk
of sudden infant death syndrome, diabetes and chronic digestive
diseases. "We want to encourage breastfeeding, not discourage
it," he said. He explained that he and his colleagues decided
to issue recommendations about vitamin D supplements after hearing
reports of rickets among breastfeeding infants. Those cases occurred
more frequently in African-American children because melanin,
the pigment that darkens skin, may act as a natural sunscreen.
Infants who are both dark- skinned and breastfed are at greater
risk of developing vitamin D deficiency than other babies. Asking
mothers to take extra vitamin D will not solve the problem, Gartner
noted, for the amount needed to satisfy nursing infants is "close
to the toxic level" in mothers. "Yes, it can be done,
but it's not really recommended," Gartner said. Rickets,
a condition in which a deficiency in vitamin D leads to abnormal
bone formation, can result in bow legs, knock knees and spinal
curvature.
SOURCE: Reuters |