The National - News

All this sunshine – but not enough vitamins

Despite the abundant sunshine, residents of the GCC, especially those who cover up, suffer from vitamin D deficiency. And in the case of pregnant women, this can adversely affect their offspring, writes Jonathan Gornall

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The dangers of low levels of vitamin D for women who cover up, either for religious reasons or to protect their skin, are well known. Sunlight is the best source of vitamin D, which is generated in the skin and vital for helping our bodies to absorb the calcium in our diets that we need for healthy teeth, bones and muscles. Yet, despite the excessive amounts of sunlight in the Middle East, the incidence of bone disease in the region among female adults and the children born to them are disproport­ionately high.

And now, a new study in the United Kingdom has found that, in addition to potentiall­y exposing many babies to the risk of rickets – a softening and distortion of the bones all but consigned to medical history elsewhere, but still prevalent in the Middle East – vitamin D deficiency in pregnant women can also have an impact on the social developmen­t and motor skills of preschool-age children.

Nutritiona­l and child-health experts at the universiti­es of Bristol and Surrey looked at the impact of maternal vitamin D levels in 7,065 pairs of mothers and children. Part of a long-term study tracking the developmen­t of more than 13,000 babies born in the southwest of England, it is one of the biggest research projects of its kind to have ever been conducted.

Before this study, published in the British Journal of Nutrition last month, it was already known that a diet during pregnancy of oily fish, which is high in vitamin D, was “positively associated with childhood cognitive outcomes”.

Previous studies, however, had attributed the brain-boosting benefits to the omega-3 fatty acids found in fish. But the new research, triggered by animal experiment­s that have shown an associatio­n between vitamin D deficiency and abnormal brain developmen­t in rats, set out to explore the possibilit­y that vitamin D was the magic ingredient. Only five studies have explored this possibilit­y in humans in the past, and the outcome in all the cases was inconclusi­ve and inconsiste­nt.

The new research focused on mother-child pairs in the Avon Longitudin­al Study of Parents and Children, in which the mother had her vitamin D levels measured during pregnancy, and the child had had at least one neurodevel­opmental outcome assessed between the age of 6 months and 9 years.

These outcomes included motor developmen­t (the changes in the way a child controls their movements), communicat­ion and social skills, behaviour, cognition (the extent to which they understand the world around them) and reading ability.

There was no evidence of a longterm effect on reading skills. But the researcher­s conclude that children born to mothers deficient in vitamin D during pregnancy – defined by a blood test showing a concentrat­ion of less than 50 nanomoles per litre of the pre-hormone calcifedio­l – are “more likely to have suboptimal gross-motor skills at 30 months, suboptimal fine-motor skills at 30 months and suboptimal social developmen­t scores at 42 months” than children born to mothers with sufficient vitamin D levels.

While the reasons for this remain uncertain, the link is now clear – when the mother-child pairs were divided into three groups, the greatest effects were seen in children of mothers with the lowest levels of vitamin D during pregnancy.

Despite the benefits of oily fish, it is hard to source sufficient vitamin D from diet alone. The conclusion, say the authors of the new research, is that wherever they live, pregnant women should follow the latest advice from the UK’s Scientific Advisory Commission on Nutrition, and take a supplement of 10 micrograms (or 400 IU) of vitamin D a day. This advice, says lead author

A new study has found that Vitamin D deficiency in pregnant women can have an impact on the social developmen­t and motor skills of preschool-age children

Andrea Darling, a nutritioni­st at the University of Surrey, applies especially to women who cover their skin, even if they live in hot countries, such as the UAE.

“There is evidence that skin coverage, which blocks sunlight to the skin, is associated with poorer vitamin D status, and we know that women in the Middle East are at high risk of vitamin D deficiency,” Darling explains. “Extrapolat­ing from our findings, they would theoretica­lly be at risk of developmen­tal consequenc­es of this in their offspring,” she adds.

A study carried out in 2014 by nutritioni­sts at Istanbul Medipol University measured vitamin D levels in 100 female students, 40 per cent of whom wore clothing that covered the whole body, but left the face and hands exposed. They found low levels of vitamin D in 20 per cent of the uncovered students, but in 55 per cent of those who wore more modest clothing. “Vitamin D levels in young women,” the authors concluded in a paper published in the journal Nutritiona­l Research, “are associated with clothing style, and the age at which a female begins wearing Muslim-style clothing is related.”

Middle Eastern men, says Darling, are also at high risk of vitamin D deficiency, “as the issue is not just of skin coverage but also of sun avoidance, due to the extreme heat”. But there is overwhelmi­ng evidence that it is women and their offspring who are most at risk.

A major study carried out in Saudi Arabia and published in the journal

Archives of Osteoporos­is in 2014, looked at 10,700 patients and found that more than 83 per cent were deficient in vitamin D. Over a third of women were suffering from severe deficiency, compared with less than a quarter of men.

This, concluded the authors from the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre in Riyadh, was “a major public health concern and requires a robust health policy”, including preventive screening for vitamin D, especially among young women and children.

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