Connect with us

Health

Vitamin D protects against severe COVID-19, study says

Published

on

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:


  • Vitamin D deficiency prior to catching COVID-19 was linked to severe illness, a study revealed.
  • Experts say Vitamin D helps strengthen the immune system to fight viruses that attack the lungs.
  • Vitamin D is “one piece of the complex puzzle” underlying severe COVID-19, the researchers said..

Covid patients with a vitamin D deficiency are more likely to suffer from a severe or critical case of the disease, according to a new study published in the journal PLOS One .

Scientists in Israel found that about half of people who were vitamin D deficient before getting COVID-19 developed severe illness, compared to less than 10% of people who had sufficient levels of the vitamin in their blood.

The latest research was the first to examine vitamin D levels in people prior to them contracting COVID-19, the study authors said.

Dr. Amiel Dror, a study author and physician at the Galilee Medical Center, said of the findings, “We found it remarkable, and striking, to see the difference in the chances of becoming a severe patient when you are lacking in vitamin D compared to when you’re not,” The Times of Israel reported.

The findings come from 253 people admitted to Galilee Medical Center in Nahariya, Israel, between April 7, 2020, and February 4, 2021 — a period before the highly infectious Omicron variant emerged.

Dror said the findings suggested that vitamin D helped bolster the immune system to deal with viruses that attack the respiratory system.

“This is equally relevant for Omicron as it was for previous variants,” Dror said.

The research doesn’t prove that vitamin D protects against COVID-19 and isn’t a green light to avoid vaccines and take vitamins instead. Vaccines cut the risk of Omicron hospitalization, particularly after a booster, by up to 90%, the UK Health Security Agency said.

Most vitamin D comes from direct sunlight on the skin. It’s also found in foods such as fatty fish, mushrooms, and egg yolks and in supplements.

Vitamin D levels of more than 20 nanograms per milliliter are considered sufficient for most people, said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Research compiled before the emergence of COVID-19 and published in The Lancet found that vitamin D cut the risk of other respiratory infections.

Advertisement

But for COVID-19, early findings have been inconsistent: Some studies have found a link between low vitamin D levels and severe COVID-19, while others have concluded that the vitamin wasn’t protective.

It wasn’t clear — even from those studies with results showing a positive correlation between low vitamin D levels and severe COVID-19 — if depleted vitamin D came before or after people became sick, the Israeli researchers said.

Despite the new data from Israel, we still don’t know if low vitamin D levels cause people with COVID-19 to develop a serious disease.

Underlying conditions that reduce vitamin D can also make people more vulnerable to severe COVID-19, for example.

The Israeli researchers cautioned that vitamin D was “one piece of the complex puzzle” underlying severe COVID-19, in addition to comorbidities, genetic predisposition, dietary habits, and geographic factors.

Source: Yahoo! News

Advertisement
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *