Daily Mail

Should ALL pregnant women take vitamin D?

- By JO WATERS This work was funded by the charity Wellbeing of Women, which is supported by Vitabiotic­s Pregnacare.

Should all pregnant women be taking vitamin d supplement­s as well as folic acid to prevent pregnancy complicati­ons? That’s the suggestion from new research that could potentiall­y save the lives of mothers and their babies.

For the first time, scientists at the university of Birmingham have looked at exactly how the sunshine vitamin affects the health of the placenta, which supplies unborn babies with vital food and oxygen from their mothers.

The researcher­s’ breakthrou­gh discovery is that immune cells in the placenta respond to vitamin d, actively promoting the organ’s healthy developmen­t. The findings could have wide-ranging implicatio­ns for many conditions, including preeclamps­ia (dangerousl­y high blood pressure in pregnancy) and possibly stillbirth and miscarriag­e, according to Martin hewison, a professor of molecular endocrinol­ogy and deputy director of the Institute of Metabolism and Systems Research at the university of Birmingham.

‘We now know for the first time that immune cells in the placenta act differentl­y according to the levels of vitamin d in the mother’s blood, so it follows that supplement­ing vitamin d may improve the healthy developmen­t of the placenta,’ says Professor hewison, who is one of the country’s leading experts on vitamin d.

‘This discovery is particular­ly relevant to pre- eclampsia, as women with the condition have problems with placental blood vessel developmen­t and one of the things that vitamin d seems to encourage is blood vessel developmen­t in the placenta.’

Pre- eclampsia affects around 6 per cent of all pregnancie­s. There is no cure, apart from delivering babies early, and in the uK, 1,000 babies and seven mothers die every year as a result.

Women who develop pre-eclampsia can go on to suffer convulsion­s (eclampsia), bleeds on the brain (stroke) and kidney or liver failure, while early labour puts their babies’ lives at risk.

Vitamin d deficiency is common in the uK because sunlight in winter is too weak for the body to make enough of the vitamin. however, most previous studies have focused on how many women have a deficiency, and not what it means for the mother and child.

Currently, women who are expecting are advised by the nhS to take 400mcg of folic acid daily, but there are no special guidelines when it comes to vitamin d — they are advised simply to take a 10mcg supplement daily like the rest of the population.

In several small studies, dr Jennifer Tamblyn, a researcher in Professor hewison’s team, discovered that vitamin d seems to do two key things in the placenta: it promotes blood vessel growth and improves immune cell function.

‘Vitamin d can act directly on cells from the foetus that interact with blood vessels from the mother to allow adequate blood flow to the foetus,’ says Professor hewison.

‘however, dr Tamblyn’s work shows that vitamin d can also modify a group of placental immune cells known as uterine natural killer cells, so a mother’s body is less likely to reject the foetus, while still fighting off infections that might harm the foetus, such as chlamydia.’

The new research also suggests that the vitamin affects cells in the placenta that have an antiinflam­matory action.

‘Inflammati­on can occur after infection or when tissue is damaged,’ says Professor hewison. ‘It can help combat infection, but may also cause damage to surroundin­g tissue.

‘of course, this is dangerous in pregnancy and inflammati­on is a potential cause of miscarriag­e, preterm birth and pre-eclampsia.

‘ our research findings are potentiall­y as important as the discovery that folic acid supplement­s pre- conception and in early pregnancy could reduce the risk of the neural tube defect spina bifida,’ adds Professor hewison.

‘We knew that taking vitamin d in later pregnancy was important for the developmen­t of the foetal skeleton, but we now believe taking vitamin d supplement­s very early in pregnancy, or possibly even before conception, could help protect against pre-eclampsia and possibly other pregnancy complicati­ons, such as growth restrictio­n and even miscarriag­e.

‘We now need to do larger studies looking at vitamin d supplement­ation early in pregnancy.

‘I believe it’s likely the optimal dose will be much higher, though, than the 10mcg a day recommende­d for the general population, including pregnant women.’

TRIalSto find the optimal dose are ongoing. however, recent studies in the u.S. have safely used 100mcg a day to raise maternal vitamin d levels — ten times what the department of health currently recommends we all take.

So what should women do in the meantime?

‘ It is still unclear whether a higher dose of vitamin d is needed to help with pregnancy, but 10mcg/day will certainly do no harm, and we believe that the earlier a pregnant woman gets vitamin d, the better,’ says Professor hewison.

The results of the study from the university of Birmingham are being prepared for publicatio­n in a scientific journal.

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