More Than Half the World’s Population Gets Insufficient Amounts of
Vitamin D
UC Riverside Biochemist Anthony Norman, expert on Vitamin D,
recommends a daily intake of 2000 international units for most adults.
RIVERSIDE, CA (July 15, 2010)
Vitamin D surfaces as a news topic every few months. How much daily vitamin D
should a person get? Is it possible to have too much of it? Is exposure to the
sun, which is the body’s natural way of producing vitamin D, the best option?
Or do supplements suffice?
In the July 2010 issue of Endocrine Today, a monthly newspaper
published by SLACK, Inc., to disseminate information about diabetes and
endocrine disorders, Anthony Norman, a distinguished professor
emeritus of biochemistry
and biomedical
sciences and an international expert on vitamin D, notes that half
the people in North America and Western Europe get insufficient amounts of
vitamin D.
“Elsewhere, it is worse,” he says, “given that two-thirds of the people are
vitamin D-insufficient or deficient. It is clear that merely eating vitamin
D-rich foods is not adequate to solve the problem for most adults.”
Currently, the recommended daily intake of vitamin D is 200 international units
(IU) for people up to 50 years old; 400 IU for people 51 to 70 years old; and
600 IU for people over 70 years old.
“There is a wide consensus among scientists that the relative daily intake of
vitamin D should be increased to 2,000 to 4,000 IU for most adults,” Norman
says. “A 2000 IU daily intake can be achieved by a combination of sunshine,
food, supplements, and possibly even limited tanning exposure.”
While there is now abundant data on vitamin D and its benefits, Norman believes
there is room for more study.
“The benefits of more research on the topic justifies why this field of
research deserves additional governmental funding,” he says. “Already, several studies
have reported substantial reductions in incidence of breast cancer, colon
cancer and type 1 diabetes in association with adequate intake of vitamin D,
the positive effect generally occurring within five years of initiation of
adequate vitamin D intake.”
Because vitamin D is found in very few foods naturally (e.g. fish, eggs and cod
liver oil) other foods such as milk, orange juice, some yogurts and some
breakfast foods are fortified with it. The fortification levels aim at about
400 IU per day.
Norman, who holds the title of Presidential Chair in Biochemistry-Emeritus, has
been researching vitamin D for nearly 50 years. In 1967, his laboratory
discovered that the vitamin is converted into a steroid hormone by the body.
Two years later, his laboratory discovered the vitamin D receptor (or VDR), an
essential receptor for the steroid hormone form of vitamin D that is present in
more than 37 target organs of the body that respond biologically to the
vitamin.
“There is now irrevocable evidence that receptors in the immune, pancreas,
heart-cardiovascular, muscle and brain systems in the body generate biological
responses to the steroid hormone form of vitamin D,” he says.