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Evidence-Informed • Australian Context • TGA Compliant

Vitamin D

Educational profile — independent, evidence-informed overview. This content is not medical advice. Please consult your healthcare provider for personalised guidance.

🧬 Family & Essentiality

FamilyFat-soluble secosteroids
EssentialityEssential nutrient
FormsD3 (cholecalciferol), D2 (ergocalciferol)

🌿 Plain-Language Summary

Vitamin D helps regulate calcium and phosphate balance, supporting bone mineralisation, muscle function, and immune modulation. D3 can be produced in the skin via sunlight (UVB) or obtained from foods and supplements.

⚗️ Molecular & Chemical IDs

  • D3: C₂₇H₄₄O (CAS 67-97-0)
  • D2: C₂₈H₄₄O (CAS 50-14-6)
  • Transported by vitamin D-binding protein

⚡ Functions

  • Facilitates intestinal calcium & phosphate absorption
  • Supports bone growth and remodelling
  • Modulates immune and inflammatory responses
  • Plays a role in muscle function

🍽️ Absorption & Bioavailability

D3Sunlight, fatty fish, liver, fortified foods — higher potency; absorbed with dietary fat
D2Fortified plant milks, UV-treated mushrooms — lower potency; shorter half-life

🇦🇺 Australian NRVs (NHMRC)

  • 19–50 yrs: AI 5 µg/day (200 IU)
  • 51–70 yrs: AI 10 µg/day (400 IU)
  • 70+ yrs: AI 15 µg/day (600 IU)
  • UL (adults): 80 µg/day (3200 IU)

AI assumes minimal sun exposure; needs vary with UV exposure, skin type, and lifestyle.

🚨 Deficiency & Excess

Deficiency

Rickets (children), osteomalacia (adults), muscle weakness.

Excess

Hypercalcaemia, kidney stress (usually from very high supplemental doses).

🥗 Food Sources

  • Fatty fish, cod liver oil, egg yolks
  • Fortified dairy & plant milks
  • UV-exposed mushrooms (D2)

🧪 Testing & Monitoring

  • Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] is the primary status marker
  • Deficiency cut-off: <50 nmol/L
  • Typical target range: ~50–125 nmol/L

🔗 Interactions

  • Fat-malabsorption reduces uptake
  • Glucocorticoids & anticonvulsants may increase breakdown
  • Excess vitamin A may antagonise bone effects

📊 Evidence Snapshot

  • 🔬✅ Well-established: Calcium homeostasis; prevention of rickets & osteomalacia
  • 🧪⚖️ Promising/mixed: Immune modulation; falls prevention in older adults
  • ⚠️❌ Unproven/hype: Broad disease prevention in replete individuals

📚 References & Further Reading

  1. NHMRC. (2006). Nutrient Reference Values for Australia and New Zealand — Vitamin D. Retrieved from https://www.nrv.gov.au
  2. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements. (2023). Vitamin D Fact Sheet. Retrieved from https://ods.od.nih.gov
  3. Pludowski, P., et al. (2023). Clinical practice recommendations for vitamin D. Frontiers in Endocrinology, 14, 117171. https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.117171

TGA-compliant note: This page describes normal physiological roles and supporting nutrients. It does not claim to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease.

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