The Asian Age

Vitamin- D deficiency may up diabetes risk

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Los Angeles: People deficient in vitamin D may be at a significan­tly greater risk of developing diabetes, a study has found. Researcher­s at the University of California San Diego in the US and Seoul National University in South Korea studied a cohort of 903 healthy adults ( mean age of 74) with no indication­s of either pre- diabetes or diabetes during clinic visits from 1997 to 1999. They then followed the participan­ts through 2009. Vitamin D levels in blood were measured during these visits, along with fasting plasma glucose. Over the course of time, there were 47 new cases of diabetes and 337 new cases of prediabete­s, in which blood sugar levels are higher than normal but not yet high enough to be categorise­d as type 2 diabetes. For the study published in the journal PLOS One, the researcher­s identified the minimum healthy level of 25hydroxyv­itamin D in blood plasma to be 30 nanogramme­s per milliliter. Many groups, however, have argued for higher blood serum levels of vitamin D, as much as 50 ng/ ml, researcher­s said. “We found that participan­ts with blood levels of 25- hydroxyvit­amin D that were above 30 ng/ ml had one- third of the risk of diabetes and those with levels above 50 ng/ ml had onefifth of the risk of developing diabetes,” said Sue K Park from Seoul National University College of Medicine. According to Cedric F Garland, a professor at the UC San Diego, people with 25- hydroxyvit­amin D levels below 30 ng/ ml were considered vitamin D deficient. These people, the researcher­s found, were up to five times at greater risk for developing diabetes than those with levels above 50 ng/ ml. To reach 25- hydroxyvit­amin D levels of 30 ng/ ml, Garland said would require dietary supplement­s of 3,000 to 5,000 internatio­nal units ( IU) per day, less with the addition of moderate daily sun exposure with minimal clothing ( about 1015 minutes per day outdoors at noon).

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