Boosting Vitamin D May Have Long-Term Benefits For Inflammation, Aging, New Study Suggests
Main Category: Complementary Medicine / Alternative MedicineAlso Included In: Nutrition / Diet; Seniors / Aging; Genetics
Article Date: 09 Nov 2007 - 3:00 PST
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There is a new reason for the 76 million baby boomers to grab a glass of milk. Vitamin D, a key nutrient in milk, could have aging benefits linked to reduced inflammation, according to a new study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
In a genetic study of more than 2,100 female twin pairs ages 19-79, British and American researchers found that higher vitamin D levels were linked to improved genetic measures of lifelong aging and chronic stress. Using a genetic marker called leukocyte telomere length (LTL), they found those with the highest vitamin D levels had longer LTL, indicating lower levels of inflammation and body stress. The telomere difference between those with the highest and lowest vitamin D levels was equivalent to 5 years of aging.
Previous research has found that shortened LTL is linked to risk for heart disease and could be an indication of chronic inflammation -- a key determinant in the biology of aging. While there are several lifestyle factors that affect telomere length (obesity, smoking and lack of physical activity), the researchers noted that boosting vitamin D levels is a simple change to affect this important marker.
Studies continue to link vitamin D to an array of health benefits, securing vitamin D's "super nutrient" status and providing even more reasons to get adequate amounts of this essential vitamin. Recent research suggests that beyond its well-established role in bone health, vitamin D also may help reduce the risk of certain cancers and autoimmune diseases, such as type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis.
Milk is a primary source of calcium and vitamin D in the American diet. In fact, government reports indicate that more than 70 percent of the calcium in our nation's food supply comes from milk and milk products. Additionally, milk is one of the few food sources of vitamin D, which is fast emerging as a "super nutrient."
The recommended three servings of low fat or fat-free milk provides 900 mg of calcium, 300 IU of vitamin D and 80 mg of magnesium daily.
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Richards JB, Valdes AM, Gardner JP, Paximadas D, Kimura M, Nessa A, Lu X, Surdulescu GL, Swaminathan R, Spector TD, Aviv A. Higher serum vitamin D concentrations are associated with longer leukocyte telomere length in women. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2007;86:1420-1425.
Source: Gloria Delgadillo
Weber Shandwick Worldwide
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Vitamin D3 Sources
posted by Edward Hutchinson on 22 Dec 2007 at 8:45 amThe idea that Milk is a primary source of vitamin D is misleading.
The addition of vitamin D is optional in fluid milk products in USA/Canada.
400 to 600iu Vit D per quart is the acceptable vitamin concentration in fortified milk.
In practice only 47.7% of samples are within the acceptable range for vit D.
Most milk samples out of compliance are under-fortified.
http://jds.fass.org/cgi/content/abstract/84/12/2813
Less than half of tested samples were up to strength.
It is misleading therefore misleading to state 3 servings of milk will provide 300iu/d3.
We must also bear in mind the body uses between 3000 & 5000iu daily.
Diet can at best provide only 10% of our daily needs.
The rest has to be provided from uvb exposure or supplements.
It is therefore safer to assume your vitamin D requirement will need to be met from sun exposure, sunbed use or effective strength vitamin D3 supplements.
Regular, 10-20 minutes, full body, sun exposure, when your shadow is shorter than your height, should provide the 4000iu daily required providing the skin has no sunscreen, sunblock or Sun protection factor cosmetics to block UVB photosynthesis of vitamin d.
It should also be made clear the issue of Vitamin D fortification of milk/bread has only recently started being considered in the EU.
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