| Vitamin D: A Cure For The Common Cold?
Is sunshine more than just a home remedy for a
cold? New
research suggests it may be: In a study being published, people
with low levels of vitamin
D — also known as the "sunshine vitamin" —
were more likely to catch cold
and flu than folks with adequate amounts. The effect of the
vitamin was strongest in people with asthma
and other lung diseases who are predisposed to respiratory infections.
People with the worst vitamin D deficiency were 36 percent more
likely to suffer respiratory infections than those with sufficient
levels, according to the research in this week's Archives
of Internal Medicine. Among asthmatics, those who were vitamin
D deficient were five times more likely to get sick than their
counterparts with healthy levels. And the risk of respiratory
infection was twice as high among vitamin D-deficient patients
with chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) than in lung patients
with normal levels of the vitamin.
All this means that healthy adults, who typically get two colds
a year, might suffer an extra one if they're vitamin D deficient.
For people with asthma or COPD, who get around four or five colds
annually, lack of vitamin D might tack on additional infections,
but exactly how many isn’t known, co-author Adit Ginde tells
ScientificAmerican.com.
Ginde, of the University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine,
and colleagues at Harvard Medical School found the association
when they compared vitamin D levels taken from nearly 19,000 participants
in the federal government's National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES) with their answers to the question, "In the
past few days, have you had a cough, cold or other acute illness?"
Only a study that gave vitamin D supplements to people with low
levels and compared their respiratory infection rates with people
who had sufficient levels of the vitamin would show a true cause
and effect, Ginde says. But, he adds, the results build on previous
research suggesting that vitamin D is important to the function
of the immune system.
Lab work has shown that lack of vitamin D is associated with weaker
production of an antimicrobial peptide called hCAP-18, a protein
that works with immune-system cells to kill pathogens. "We
think that if you're exposed to a virus [and] you have sufficient
vitamin D, those cells will be better equipped to fight off that
organism so you don’t get an infection," says Ginde,
an assistant professor of surgery in his university's department
of emergency medicine. In people with vitamin D deficiency, it's
possible that "those cells don’t work as well so you're
more like to get a cold or infection or something more severe."
In people with asthma or COPD, he added, vitamin D deficiency
"is a second hit" that may compound their underlying
risk of respiratory infection from their disease.
Having 30 nanograms of vitamin D per milliliter of blood is considered
optimal. More than half of the people in the study had vitamin
D levels below that threshold.
The most recent recommendations from the Institute of Medicine
(IOM), which are 12 years old, say that Americans should get 200-600
International Units of vitamin D a day. But those recommendations
were set based on the vitamin's contribution to bone health, not
immunity and overall wellbeing. Proponents of more vitamin D intake,
such as Michael Holick, say 1,000-2,000 IUs might be needed. An
IOM update to the recommendations is expected in May 2010.
"It's clear that the American population needs more vitamin
D overall for its effects on bone health and the growing literature
on non-skeletal benefits for general health," says Ginde,
who expects participants in an upcoming vitamin D trial will get
the amped up levels of 1,000-2,000 IUs that advocates are pushing
for. "We're not recommending that everyone go out and take
that, but that's the magnitude of change we're talking about."
Reference Source 128
February 27, 2009
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