http://www.reutershealth.com/archive/2001/11/02/eline/links/20011102elin002.html
By Suzanne Rostler
NEW YORK, Nov 02 (Reuters Health)
- Infants who receive the recommended daily dose of vitamin D may have
a lower risk of developing type 1 diabetes, researchers report.
Babies who received at least 2,000
international units (IU) of vitamin D daily were nearly 80% less likely
to develop type 1 diabetes over the next three decades compared with infants
who had lower intakes of the vitamin, according to findings published in
the November 3rd issue of The Lancet.
It is not clear how vitamin D may
lower the risk of type 1 diabetes, which occurs when the body's own immune
system destroys the insulin-producing cells of the pancreas. However, vitamin
D has been shown to suppress certain cells of the immune system that may
play a role in the development of the disorder.
"As type 1 diabetes is considered
to be an autoimmune disease, it seems likely that vitamin D would be needed
in enabling the optimal function of the immune system and in preventing
too aggressive attacks against the body's own tissues," Dr. Elina Hypponen,
the study's lead author, told Reuters Health.
Current guidelines recommend that
infants receive 7.5 to 10 micrograms (mcg), or about 400 international
units (IU) of vitamin D daily. Sources of vitamin D include fatty salt-water
fish, fortified cows' milk, eggs and infant formulas.
Research on animals has shown an
association between vitamin D and a reduced risk of type 1 diabetes. To
investigate the relationship in humans, the researchers followed more than
10,000 women who were due to give birth in 1966 in northern Finland.
New mothers recorded whether they
gave vitamin D supplements to their children and how much they provided,
during the first year of life. Researchers tracked the number of children
who developed type 1 diabetes over 31 years.
Nearly 12% of children were given
vitamin D supplements occasionally during their first year of life, 88%
received regular vitamin D supplements and less than 1% were not given
vitamin D. Overall, 81 children were diagnosed with diabetes during the
study.
"These findings bring hope that something
can be done in order to prevent the disease," Hypponen, from the Institute
of Child Health in London, UK, told Reuters Health in an interview.
But while the study may be good news
for families with a history of type 1 diabetes, the results may not apply
to children in countries that receive more natural sunlight. In northern
Finland, there are just 2 hours of sun daily during the month of December.
Ultraviolet light triggers a reaction
in the skin that helps the body synthesize its own vitamin D. People with
darker skin need more sunlight than their paler counterparts.
In an accompanying editorial, Dr.
Jill M. Norris from the University of Colorado in Denver adds that children
who receive infant formula instead of breast milk, which contains inadequate
amounts of vitamin D, may also be less likely suffer from a deficiency
of vitamin D.
"The emphasis on breast-feeding,
the advice to keep babies out of the sun, and the increase in use of sunscreen
when infants and toddlers are in the sun may act together to decrease the
intake and synthesis of the sunshine vitamin," Norris writes.
SOURCE: The Lancet 2001;358:1476-1478,
1500-1503.
Copyright © 2001 Reuters Limited