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Vitamin D Supplements Found To Be Safe For Healthy Pregnant Women
Reported June 27, 2011
Use of vitamin D supplements during pregnancy has long been a matter of
concern but now researchers writing in the Journal of Bone and Mineral
Research report that even a high supplementation amount in healthy pregnant
women was safe and effective in raising circulating vitamin D to a level
thought by some to be optimal. The study also found no adverse effects of
vitamin D supplementation, even at the highest amount, in women or their
newborns.
The research team, led by Dr. Bruce Hollis from the Medical University of
South Carolina in Charleston, used a randomized controlled trial with
healthy expectant mothers to discover how varying dosages of daily
supplements could safely sustain a circulating vitamin D level of at least
32 nanograms per milliliter.
"Vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy remains controversial largely
due to severe misconceptions about the potential harm it may cause to the
fetus," said Dr Hollis. "Surprisingly the scientific debate has made little
progress since Dr. Gilbert Forbes made a recommendation of 200 IU
(international units) per day in 1963, which was based on a hunch."
While the threat of vitamin D during pregnancy has remained little known, it
has been established that the vitamin plays a role in homeostasis, the
body's internal regulation, during pregnancy and that a deficiency can
effect immune, pancreatic and cardiovascular systems.
Dr Hollis' team monitored the pregnancies of 350 women, from a variety of
ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds, who were all between 12 and 16 weeks
into gestation. The women were randomly assigned to one of three groups. One
group received 400 IU of vitamin D per day, the second group received 2,000
IU per day and the third received 4,000 IU daily.
The team found that women who received the highest level of supplementation
(4,000 IU per day) were more likely to achieve and sustain the desired level
of circulating levels of vitamin D throughout their pregnancy. Moreover, the
researchers found that pregnant women who received lower levels of vitamin D
supplementation did not attain the threshold circulating level of the
vitamin.
"In our study subjects, a daily dosage of up to 4,000 IU of vitamin D was
required to sustain normal metabolism in pregnant women," concluded Dr
Hollis. "Furthermore, following decades of speculation into its safety our
research has demonstrated vitamin D supplementation to be both safe and
effective." |