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Lack of Sun Does Not Explain Low Vitamin D in Elderly Who Are Overweight
6/9/07 It’s not yet clear why overweight elderly adults
have low levels of vitamin D in their blood. However, researchers at the
Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts
University (USDA HNRCA) have found that lack of sun exposure may not
account for low levels of vitamin D in elders who are overweight.
“People aged 65 and over with high percent body fat have lower levels of
25-hydroxyvitamin D, the storage form of vitamin D, compared to those who
have lower percent body fat,” says corresponding author Susan Harris, DSc,
epidemiologist in the Bone Metabolism Laboratory at the USDA HNRCA.
Harris and co-author Bess Dawson-Hughes, MD, director of the Bone
Metabolism Laboratory at the USDA HNRCA, interviewed 381 Caucasian men and
women aged 65 and over about their sun exposure over a previous
three-month period. Individuals reported how much time they spent
outdoors, how much skin was exposed while outdoors, and whether or not
they wore sunscreen. Seasonality, or when the individual entered the
study, was also taken into account, because in Boston, where the study was
conducted, sun rays are weak in winter compared with summer months. The
researchers measured participants’ percent body fat using dual-energy
x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), a precise method for determining body
composition.
Individuals were grouped into quartiles of percent body
fat: less than 28 percent, 28 percent to 33 percent, 34 percent to 40
percent, and greater than 40 percent. Blood levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D
were measured and participants were asked to fill out a dietary
questionnaire to measure the amount of vitamin D they obtained from food.
Harris and Dawson-Hughes found that when adjusted for sex, age,
seasonality and dietary vitamin D intake, 25-hydroxyvitamin D
significantly decreased as body fat increased, (P<0.024). When the
researchers further adjusted for sunlight exposure variables,
25-hydroxyvitamin D values still significantly decreased as body fat
increased. “Sunlight exposure could not account for low vitamin D stores
in older people with high percent body fat,” explains Harris.
Vitamin D is called the “sunshine vitamin” because it is produced by the
body when the skin is exposed to ultraviolet (UV) rays from the sun.
Vitamin D can also be obtained from foods such as fish and fortified milk
and from supplements. When this fat-soluble vitamin enters the body it is
converted in the liver to 25-hydroxyvitamin D. This is one of several
important forms of vitamin D, and is the form that researchers and
clinicians use as an indicator of vitamin D status in individuals.
“Vitamin D is especially critical in maintaining bone health, and there is
evidence that many older Americans have low blood levels of vitamin D,
which can put them at risk for bone fractures and osteoporosis,” says
Dawson-Hughes, who is also a professor at Tufts University School of
Medicine.
“These results cannot be carried over to other populations, such as young
people, or elderly living in different climates. However, if low vitamin D
stores are not attributed to low sunlight exposure in this population, it
suggests that we should explore other possibilities,” says Harris. “The
most likely explanation seems to be that vitamin D is sequestered in fat
tissue, reducing its entry into the blood.”
This study was supported by the Agricultural Research Service of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture and by a grant from the National Institutes of
Health.
Harris SS, Dawson-Hughes B. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology &
Metabolism. Electronic version May 2007 doi:10.1210/jc.2007-0702. “Reduced
Sun Exposure Does Not Explain the Inverse Association of 25-Hydroxyvitamin
D with Percent Body Fat in Older Adults.”
The Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and
Policy at Tufts University is the only independent school of nutrition in
the United States. The school’s eight centers, which focus on questions
relating to famine, hunger, poverty, and communications, are renowned for
the application of scientific research to national and international
policy. For two decades, the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging at Tufts University has studied the relationship between
good nutrition and good health in aging populations. Tufts research
scientists work with federal agencies to establish the USDA Dietary
Guidelines, the Dietary Reference Intakes, and other significant public
policies.