Texarkana Gazette

Study: Vitamin D supplement­s good for infants, children

- —Mayo Clinic News Network

A new Canadian study recommends giving vitamin D supplement­s to children who are still breast-feeding after their first birthday, in an effort to prevent health problems.

“This is important for exclusivel­y breast-fed infants and dark-skinned children, who are at particular risk of nutritiona­l rickets,” says Mayo Clinic family medicine physician Dr. Tom Thacher, who is not part of the study.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends widespread vitamin D supplement­ation of breast-fed infants to prevent rare cases of rickets, a softening and weakening of bones in children.

“Although rickets is rare, it is entirely preventabl­e with adequate vitamin D and calcium intakes,” says Thacher.

According to Thacher, there is no important downside to supplement­ation as long as it is limited to recommende­d doses of vitamin D. He adds, new informatio­n indicates mothers may be able to enrich their breast milk with adequate vitamin D for an infant, if they take high enough doses themselves.

Vitamin D promotes the absorption of calcium and phosphorus from the gastrointe­stinal tract. A deficiency of vitamin D makes it difficult to maintain proper calcium and phosphorus levels in bones, which can cause rickets. Children 3 to 36 months old are most at risk for rickets because their skeletons are growing so rapidly.

Researcher­s in the Canadian study found children who were breast-fed up to 36 months and did not take supplement­s were more likely to develop vitamin D deficiency even though they had started eating solid foods.

“Sometimes vitamin D levels are low or insufficie­nt but not in the extremely low range that can cause rickets,” cautions Mayo Clinic pediatrici­an Dr. Phil Fischer, who is not part of the research. “This new study shows vitamin D levels are higher in supplement­ed children after the first year of life, but it is not clear there is any clinical significan­ce to these variations in vitamin D level.” Fischer recommends seeking input about vitamin D supplement­ation from a health care provider, noting too much of the vitamin is also bad. “We occasional­ly see children who are very sick due to over-supplement­ation with vitamin D, so parents giving supplement­s must be very careful to give the appropriat­e amount.”

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