Get your Vitamin D!
From: Roger Greenway, ENN.com
We know that Vitamin D
levels increase when we spend more time in the Sun. So its not a surprise that
our Vitamin D levels are higher in the Summer months when we generally spend
more time outdoors. A new study has found exactly that!
UC Irvine and Mayo
Clinic researchers have found that vitamin D levels in the U.S. population peak
in August and bottom out in February. The essential vitamin — necessary for
healthy bones — is produced in the skin upon exposure to ultraviolet B rays
from the sun.
To further study this link, good estimates of the
cyclicality of the vitamin are necessary. Solar exposure — a timely topic since
June 21 marks the first day of summer — is the most important way people
acquire vitamin D. But certain foods, including egg yolks and oil-rich fish
like mackerel, salmon, sardines and herring contain the nutrient. In addition,
milk and cereal are often enriched with vitamin D.
"Even with food
fortification, vitamin D levels in the population show a high level of
seasonality due to the influence of sunlight," said Amy Kasahara, a UC
Irvine graduate student in public health and first author on the paper, which
appears in the journal
PLOS ONE.
"The exact
biochemical pathways from UVB rays to vitamin D were discovered in the
1970s," she said. "In this study, we have shown that vitamin D levels
lag the solar cycle, peaking in August and troughing in February."
The correlation between
the seasons and vitamin D has been known for some time. "What we have been
able to do is put a lot more precision on the estimates of vitamin D
seasonality," said Andrew Noymer, associate professor of public health and
senior author of the article.
"Our analysis,
combined with other data, will help contribute to understanding the role of
vitamin D in all seasonal diseases, where the simple winter/spring/summer/fall
categories are not sufficient."
Researchers measured the
level of 25-hydroxyvitamin D in 3.4 million blood samples collected weekly in
the U.S. between July 2006 and December 2011.
The study looked at
population averages, so people shouldn't make assumptions about their own
levels of vitamin D based on the calendar. Healthcare providers can perform
individual blood tests to measure vitamin D directly, and supplements are
available for those who cannot or do not receive enough exposure to sunlight.
Link to the University of California newsroom.