The Sunday Guardian

Vitamin D may reduce diabetes risk in children

- CORRESPOND­ENT

Children who receive higher levels of Vitamin D during infancy and childhood may be significan­tly at a lower risk of developing islet autoimmuni­ty as well as Type 1 diabetes, according to a study.

Type 1 diabetes is a chronic autoimmune disease that is increasing by 3-5% annually worldwide and occurs when the body’s immune system destroys its own insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas.

Islet autoimmuni­ty, detected by antibodies that appear when the immune system attacks the islet cells in the pancreas that produce insulin, is a precursor to Type 1 diabetes. Vitamin D represents a candidate protective factor for Type 1 diabetes as it regulates the immune system and autoimmuni­ty, the researcher­s said.

“For several years there has been controvers­y among scientists about whether Vi- tamin D lowers the risk of developing of islet autoimmuni­ty and Type 1 diabetes,” said lead author Jill Norris from the Colorado University -Anschutz.

In the study, published in the journal Diabetes, the team searched for triggers and protective factors in 8,676 children with elevated Type 1 diabetes risk.

They identified islet autoimmuni­ty in 376 children and compared them with 1,041 children who did not.

Among children who were at an increased genetic risk for Type 1 diabetes, those with lower Vitamin D levels in infancy and childhood went on to develop islet autoimmuni­ty compared with those who did not develop autoimmuni­ty.

The study showed that higher childhood vitamin D levels are significan­tly associated with a decreased risk of islet autoimmuni­ty. IANS

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