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The Pain & Therapy Bibliography, Record ID 2219 {show all records}

Risk assessment for vitamin D


added Apr 22, 11, updated Mar 9, 12
most detailed summaries by Paul Ingraham

summary

“A prevailing concern exists … regarding the potential for toxicity related to excessive vitamin D intakes.” However, “Collectively, the absence of toxicity in trials conducted in healthy adults that used vitamin D dose > or = 250 microg/d (10,000 IU vitamin D3) supports the confident selection of this value as the UL.”

item type
article in a journal
authors
John N Hathcock, Andrew Shao, Reinhold Vieth, and Robert Heaney
pubmed
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17209171
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full text
http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=17209171
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journal
Am J Clin Nutr
year
2007
month
Jan
volume
85
number
1
pages
6-18

abstract

The objective of this review was to apply the risk assessment methodology used by the Food and Nutrition Board (FNB) to derive a revised safe Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL) for vitamin D. New data continue to emerge regarding the health benefits of vitamin D beyond its role in bone. The intakes associated with those benefits suggest a need for levels of supplementation, food fortification, or both that are higher than current levels. A prevailing concern exists, however, regarding the potential for toxicity related to excessive vitamin D intakes. The UL established by the FNB for vitamin D (50 microg, or 2000 IU) is not based on current evidence and is viewed by many as being too restrictive, thus curtailing research, commercial development, and optimization of nutritional policy. Human clinical trial data published subsequent to the establishment of the FNB vitamin D UL published in 1997 support a significantly higher UL. We present a risk assessment based on relevant, well-designed human clinical trials of vitamin D. Collectively, the absence of toxicity in trials conducted in healthy adults that used vitamin D dose > or = 250 microg/d (10,000 IU vitamin D3) supports the confident selection of this value as the UL.

related content

These two articles on SaveYourself.ca cite this paper as a source:

  1. Save Yourself from Trigger Points & Myofascial Pain Syndrome
  2. The Safety of Vitamin D for Pain