Vicki Cohn
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
New Rochelle, NY, December 16, 2008—Once believed to be important
only for bone health, vitamin D is now seen as having a critical
function in maintaining the immune system throughout life. The newly
recognized disease risks associated with vitamin D deficiency are
clearly documented in a report in the December issue (Volume 3, Number
4) of Breastfeeding Medicine, a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (www.liebertpub.com), and the official journal of the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine (www.bfmed.org). The paper is available free online at www.liebertpub.com/bfm
Vitamin
D deficiency is common across populations and particularly among people
with darker skin. Nutritional rickets among nursing infants whose
mothers have insufficient levels of vitamin D is an increasingly
common, yet preventable disorder.
Carol Wagner, MD, Sarah
Taylor, MD, and Bruce Hollis, PhD, from the Department of Pediatrics,
Medical University of South Carolina (Charleston), emphasize the need
for clinical studies to determine the dose of vitamin D needed to
achieve adequate vitamin D levels in breastfeeding mothers and their
infants without toxicity.
In a paper entitled, "Does Vitamin
D Make the World Go 'Round'?" the authors point out that vitamin D is
now viewed not simply as a vitamin with a role in promoting bone
health, but as a complex hormone that helps to regulate immune system
function. Long-term vitamin D deficiency has been linked to immune
disorders such as multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, type I
diabetes, and cancer.
"Vitamin D is a hormone not a vitamin and it is not just for kids anymore," writes Ruth A. Lawrence, MD, Editor-in-Chief of Breastfeeding Medicine,
from the Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of
Medicine and Dentistry, in an accompanying editorial. "Perhaps the most
startling information is that adults are commonly deficit in modern
society. Vitamin D is now recognized as a pivotal hormone in the human
immune system, a role far beyond the prevention of rickets, as pointed
out in the article by Wagner et al in this month's issue of Breastfeeding Medicine."
Source: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News
Original article: Carol L. Wagner, Sarah N. Taylor, Bruce W. Hollis.
Does Vitamin D Make the World Go ‘Round’? Breastfeeding Medicine.
December 1, 2008,
3(4): 239-250.
doi:10.1089/bfm.2008.9984.
|