For many people, vitamins are beneficial and essential, not potentially poisonous. However, in a "Letter to the Editor" of the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), researchers from Boston University School of Medicine, describe the dangers associated with ingestion of an over-the-counter vitamin D supplement. (NEJM, 4-Jul-2001)
http://www.newswise.com/articles/2001/7/VITAMIN.BOS.html
Boston University
RESEARCHERS REPORT CASE OF VITAMIN
D INTOXIFICATION FROM SUPPLEMENTS
Boston, MA-For many people, vitamins
are beneficial and essential, not potentially poisonous. However, in a
"Letter to the Editor" of the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), researchers
from Boston University School of Medicine, describe the dangers associated
with ingestion of an over-the-counter vitamin D supplement.
The researchers report on a 42-year-old
man who had been hospitalized with symptoms of hypercalcemia-vitamin D
intoxification. He had been taking a supplement that contained vitamin
D for two years prior to his hospitalization. On admission, his serum level
of 25-hydroxyvitamin D was more than 10 fold higher than the upper normal
range; 487.3 ng/ml (normal range is 8.9-46.7 ng/ml). Upon stopping use
of the supplement, his blood tests slowly returned to normal after thirty
months.
The researchers went on to examine
the patients' supplements, as well as supplements they purchased separately.
"The supplements we analyzed contained 26 to 430 times the amount claimed
by the manufacturers," said senior author Michael F. Holick, PhD, MD, director
of the Bone Health Care Center at Boston University Medical Center. "That's
78 to 1,302 times the recommended safe upper limit of 2000 IU," he said.
According to Holick, more than one
third of people in the United States regularly use dietary supplements.
"Our intention is not to frighten people who take supplements, but to make
them aware that these products are not FDA approved and thus are not as
stringently regulated as products that are," he added.
Contact:
5-Jul-01
Gina M. DiGravio
Julianne LaMay
(617) 638-8491