Adequate
sunlight is an essential part
of the chemical process that helps our body
produce vitamin D. But factors such as the
season of the year, latitude, time of day,
cloud cover, smog, and sun screens all affect
the amount of ultraviolet ray exposure we
receive from the sun and can reduce our
supply of vitamin D. In countries where
exposure to the sun is reduced by head to
feet clothing for religious or other reasons,
vitamin D under nutrition is a problem.
Elderly people who stay inside and have
poor diets may also have a sub clinical
deficiency of vitamin D.
Vitamin
D can be made in our bodies - in the
skin to be more precise - but only if sunlight
is available to carry out the synthesis.
Vitamin D, or calciferol, is a fat-soluble
vitamin. It exists in several forms, each
with a different biological activity. Vitamin
D3 (cholecalciferol) is made by the body
and is found in some foods. Vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol)
is the form most often added to milk and
other foods, and the form most often found
in nutrition supplements.
Fortified
foods are the major dietary sources of vitamin.
One cup of vitamin D fortified milk, for
example, supplies about one-fourth of the
estimated daily need for this vitamin for
adults. Although milk is fortified with
vitamin D, dairy products made from milk
such as cheese, yogurt, and ice cream are
generally not fortified with vitamin D.
Only a few foods naturally contain significant
amounts of vitamin D, including fatty fish
and fish oils.
In
the body, vitamin D together with calcium
plays a major role in bone development.
Most nutritionists now acknowledge that
the combination of vitamin D and calcium
supplements can be quite helpful for
preventing and treating osteoporosis. Women
with severe osteoporosis have low levels
of vitamin D. Supplementing with vitamin
D alone may not be helpful, but the combination
of calcium and vitamin D can slow down or
even reverse osteoporosis.