Business Standard

Let the sunshine in

Is vitamin D deficiency the new epidemic sweeping the country? Veenu Sandhu sets out to answer the question and find some solutions

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‘GOVERNMENT NEEDS TO INTERVENE, THE WAY IT DID FOR IODINE DEFICIENCY’ AASHISH CHAUDHRY Senior Consultant (Orthopaedi­cs) and Managing Director, Aakash Healthcare

In 2016, rapper Baba Sehgal released a song that was wacky even by his standards. He called it “Vitamin D ”. It went something like this: Gogogogo go go outside/ Kholo apnie yes wide/ Sun bole lelo Vitamin D ki ride. The gist of it was: step outside; open your eyes wide; the sun’ s inviting you to take a vitamin D ride.

Sehgal’s songsone would ordinarily take seriously. But this time round the rapperwas, inhisownwa­y, drawing attention to a serious issue: vitamin D deficiency, which, if re searches and doctors are to be believed, is assuming epidemic proportion­s, not justin India but even in the West.

The Internatio­nal Osteoporos­is Foundation estimates that 80 per cent of people across urban India suffer from vitamin D deficiency. The normal range, according to the way it ismeasured in India, is 75 to 185 nanomoles per litre. Some path labs consider the normal upper range to be 200 nanomoles per litre.

“I find an increasing number of people who come tome with aches and pains to be deficient in this vitamin that is vitalabsor­ption as well as bone and muscle strength ,” says Aashish Chaudhry, senior consultant( or tho pa edi cs) and managing director, Aakash Healthcare, New Delhi. Theorthopa­edic says that a tone point his own vitamin D level had plunged to 13.

A vitamin D deficiency is ordinarily understood to impact women, especially those who are pregnant or are menopausal, or older people. But doctors are now observing a much wider population, including men and20- to30-year-olds, suffering from the deficiency .“I find it even in children as young as six months old because the concept of giving the baby an oil massage while sitting out in the sun has practicall­y died,” says Chaudhry.

In its most natural form, humans, like animals, receive the required daily dose of vitamin D from exposure to the sun— that too, morningsun, between7 am and 1pm. To get optimal doses, you need to sun yourself for at least half an hour with 40 percent of your body exposed.

Despite living under the glare of the tropical sun, that rarely happens. Our busy schedules, our living conditions where sunlight is often a luxury, pollution as also social mo res that fr own upon exposure are collective­ly responsibl­e. The melanin pigment in the Indian skin, which gives it a brown colour, also makes vitamin D absorption difficult.

What’s more, unless a person has visible sign soft he deficiency, such as weak bones, osteoporos­is or is of advanced age, the problem is likely togo undetected. In children, youwill see visible, and sometimes alarming, signs such as stunted growth, weak bones or a large skull .“These are signs you can not miss ,” says Chaudhry .“But as adults, we tend to think that the weakness or stiffness is because of lack of exercise.”

Several doctors have now routinely starting prescribin­g the vitamin D 3 test for those they think might be deficient and are even recommendi­ng vitamin D supplement­s.

This has happened particular­ly after the Indian Medical Associatio­n( I MA) felt the need to sen si ti se doctors to the issue and raise awareness about vitamin D deficiency in the Indian population. The IMA dids o through “Rise & Shine”, a D-deficiency awareness initiative.

There are reasons for the concern. Often under rated and little understood, vitamin D performs crucial functions. Besides being critical for bone and muscle strength, because it is necessary for calcium absorption, it also impacts energy levels, cardiovasc­ular health, brain functionin­g, fertility and the synthesis of red blood cells, which are the body’ s warriors against diseases. So, it also builds immunity.

A simple blood test called calcifedio­l, or 25- hydroxy vitamin D, is used to determine how much vitamin D there is in the body. Some doctors, especially endocrinol­ogists, may recommend the more expensive 125di hydroxy vitamin D 3 test. But this is to check the active form of vitamin D, which is inf acta hormone produced after vitamin D has been “activated” in the kidney. This test is, however, not always needed. The 25hydroxy vitamin D usually suffices.

In the event of a deficiency, the doctor will prescribe a supplement because there is simply no other way of top ping up the vitamin Din the body. Vegetables and milk don’ t give you any vitamin D. There are some foods such as salmon and egg yolk that do contain the vitamin but the quantity is not enough to meet the daily need. Anegg, for example, contains barely 40 to 50 units of vitamin D whereas the daily requiremen­t is between 600 and 1,000 units.

Supplement­s come indifferen­t dos ages as chew able tablets, sachets, capsules and also in liquid form. As with medicines, these supplement­s should not be consumed without consulting a doctor. That’ s because, although rare, a vitamin Dover dose, or toxicity, can be as— if not more— dangerous as its deficiency.

Vitamin D toxicity causes a build up of calcium, orhypercal­cemia, in the blood stream. Its symptoms include vomiting, nausea, stomach pain, constipati­on, diarrhoea, fatigue, dizziness and confusion. It can affect the liver, heart and brain. What’s more, too much vitamin D is detrimenta­l to bone health, leading to bone loss. And, in extreme conditions, it can damage the kidneys.

How ever, given the high prevalence of its deficiency, there is one view that some foods such as milk and cheese should be fortified with vitamin D. A chocolate health drink aimed at children has, in fact, come up with a vitamin D- fortified version.

Chaudhry is for a top-down approach in the matter, where he feels that “the government needs to intervene ,” the way it did when io dine deficiency became a serious problem in India .“Today you have io dis ed salt and fewer cases of io dine deficiency ,” he says, adding that countries such as Hong Kong, the US and the UK have vitamin D-fortified products such as milk and cheese that can be bought off the shelf.

Shikha Sharma, founder of Nutri Health in Delhi, is, however, scep tic al about adding the vitamin to everyday food items .“I am anti-fortificat­ion of normal food. Then people will be oblivious to their vitamin Din take and could touch dangerous levels ,” she says. “Instead, fortify something that is obvious .”

There are also stories of people reporting excessive levels of the vitamin in their body after taking a supplement .“That is bound to happen if you get a test done a day or two after taking the supplement ,” says Chaudhry. “Wa it for four to six weeks after the last dose of the vitamin before repeating the test.”

Though it is being talked about today like never before, vitamin D has the medical community divided. The right dose, the right duration of that dose and the right test —many of these are questions that are still being answered.

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