| November 29, 2006
Vitamin D deficiency common in IBD kids
By Stephen Daniells
29/11/2006 - Children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are
at an increased risk of vitamin D deficiency and could benefit from supplements to avoid
the health problems associated with not getting enough of the vitamin.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is said to affect about one person in every 500, which
equates to over half a million people in the US, and 150,000 people in the UK. Current
methods of treating or managing the disease are limited to a range of drugs and surgical
intervention.
Lead researcher Helen Pappa, from Children's Hospital Boston, Massachusetts, told NutraIngredients.com:
“One of the study's findings was a strong correlation between albumin level and
vitamin D level, which may point to a "leaky gut" as one of the mechanisms for
low vitamin D in this population.”
The new research, published in the journal Pediatrics, analysed the blood levels
of vitamin D for 130 IBD patients (age range 8–22). Ninety-four of the patients
had Crohn's disease and 36 had ulcerative colitis. Measures of parathyroid hormone and
lumbar spine bone mineral density were also taken.
Vitamin D is produced in the skin on exposure to UVB radiation and can also be consumed
in small amounts from the diet. However, recent studies have shown that sunshine levels
in some northern countries are so weak during the winter months that the body makes no
vitamin D at all, leading some to estimate that over half of the population in such countries
have insufficient or deficient levels of the vitamin.
Increased skin pigmentation also reduces the effect of UVB radiation meaning darker skinned
people are more at risk.
Vitamin D deficiency can lead to a range of health problems, including rickets, poor
tooth formation, convulsions, general ill health, and stunted growth. It has also been
linked to an increased risk of certain cancers, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and
osteoporosis.
The researchers reported that the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency was 34.6 per cent,
with similar levels in both Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis patients. In patients
with increased skin pigmentation serum levels of 25-hydroxy-vitamin D were about 53 per
cent lower, and during the winter months the average 25-hydroxy-vitamin D level in all
the subjects was 33 per cent lower.
The patients taking regular vitamin D supplements had serum vitamin D levels 31.5 per
cent higher than those not taking supplements.
“Vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent among paediatric patients with inflammatory
bowel disease,” wrote the researchers in Pediatrics. “Factors predisposing
to the problem include having a dark-skin complexion, winter season, lack of vitamin D
supplementation, early stage of disease, more severe disease, and upper gastrointestinal
tract involvement in patients with Crohn disease.”
The research merely links IBD to low serum vitamin D levels and there is not suggestion
that vitamin D deficiency is the cause of IBD. Dr. Pappa told this website however that
prospective epidemiologic studies would be needed to check this “interesting hypothesis”.
Further research to examine the relationship is clearly merited and Dr. Pappa said: “Our
centre is planning prospective studies of the benefits of vitamin D supplementation on
multiple aspects of the health of children with IBD.”
Source: Pediatrics
Volume 118, Number 5, November 2006, pp. 1950-1961 (doi:10.1542/peds.2006-0841)
“Vitamin D Status in Children and Young Adults With Inflammatory Bowel Disease”
Authors: H. Pappa, C. Gordon, T. Saslowsky, A. Zholudev, B. Horr, M-C. Shih, R. Grand
Source: www.nutraingredients.com
| Comment: Dr. Rath’s
research shows that it is not just one vitamin or nutrient that is essential but it
is the synergistic combination of specific of vitamins, amino acids, and minerals
along with other micronutrients that are essential for the proper functioning of the
cells in our body. You can read more about Dr.Rath’s research at
http://www.drrathresearch.org/ |
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