New
Service for TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items
from Amazon
Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Vitamin D2
supplements may help prevent falls among
high-risk Older Women
Newswise — Vitamin D2 supplements appear to
reduce the risk of falls among women with a
history of falling and low blood vitamin D
levels living in sunny climates, especially
during the winter, according to a report in
the January 14 issue of Archives of Internal
Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
“Approximately one-third of women older than
65 years fall each year, and 6 percent
sustain a fracture as a result of the fall,”
the authors write as background information
in the article. “In addition, fear of
falling is a major problem in older people.”
Richard L. Prince, M.D., of the Sir Charles
Gairdner Hospital, Nedlands, Australia, and
colleagues conducted a year-long clinical
trial of 302 women age 70 to 90 years living
in Perth, Australia.
Because
vitamin D is produced in response to sun
exposure and the study was completed in a
sunny climate, the researchers selected
women with blood vitamin D levels below the
median for the area (24 nanograms per
milliliter).
All participants had a history of falling in
the previous year and received 1,000
milligrams of calcium citrate per day. Half
were then randomly assigned to take either
1,000 international units of vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol)
and half took an identical placebo. Data on
falls were collected from participants every
six weeks.
Eighty women (53 percent) in the vitamin D2
group and 95 women (62.9 percent) in the
control group fell at least once during the
study period.
After adjusting for height, which affected
the risk of falling and was significantly
different between the two groups, vitamin D2
therapy reduced the risk of having at least
one fall by 19 percent.
“When those who fell were grouped by the
season of first fall or the number of falls
they had, ergocalciferol treatment reduced
the risk of having the first fall in winter
and spring but not in summer and autumn, and
reduced the risk of having one fall but not
multiple falls,” the authors write.
“It is interesting that the ergocalciferol
therapy effect was confined to those who
were to sustain one fall but not those
destined to have more than one fall,” the
authors write.
“Older people who fall frequently tend to
have more risk factors for falling,
including greater degrees of disability and
poorer levels of physical function.” It is
possible that chemically correcting vitamin
D levels in the blood is insufficient to
prevent falls in these individuals, they
note.
“Ergocalciferol, 1,000 international units
per day, added to a high calcium intake is
associated with 23 percent reduction of the
risk of falling in winter/spring to the same
level as in summer/autumn,” the authors
conclude.
(Arch Intern Med. 2008;168[1]:103-108.
Available pre-embargo to the media at
www.jamamedia.org.)