Vitamin D—Effects on Skeletal and Extraskeletal Health and the Need for Supplementation
Vitamin D, the sunshine vitamin, has received a lot
of attention recently as a result of a meteoric rise in the number of
publications showing that vitamin D plays a crucial role in a plethora
of physiological functions and associating vitamin D deficiency with
many acute and chronic illnesses including disorders of calcium
metabolism, autoimmune diseases, some cancers, type 2 diabetes mellitus,
cardiovascular disease and infectious diseases. Vitamin D deficiency is
now recognized as a global pandemic. The major cause for vitamin D
deficiency is the lack of appreciation that sun exposure has been and
continues to be the major source of vitamin D for children and adults of
all ages. Vitamin D plays a crucial role in the development and
maintenance of a healthy skeleton throughout life. There remains some
controversy regarding what blood level of 25-hydroxyvitamin D should be
attained for both bone health and reducing risk for vitamin D deficiency
associated acute and chronic diseases and how much vitamin D should be
supplemented.
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