Article Text
How to do it
Vitamin D supplementation
Abstract
Vitamin D testing and supplementation is of great interest to neurologists and their patients. Recommended nutritional intakes of vitamin D in the UK remain focused on bone health, despite increasing evidence for a role outside this area. Here we discuss how neurologists might approach vitamin D testing and supplementation, focusing on two conditions associated with vitamin D deficiency that have an increased risk of downstream complications resulting from these: multiple sclerosis and epilepsy. We set out a rationale for testing serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations and discuss our personal practice in terms of supplementation, with evidence where available.
- vitamin D
- multiple sclerosis
- epilepsy
- osteoporosis
- supplementation
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Population vitamin D supplementation in UK adults: too much of nothing?
- Vitamin D and SARS-CoV-2 virus/COVID-19 disease
- Does vitamin D supplementation prevent SARS-CoV-2 infection in military personnel? Review of the evidence
- Prevention of rickets and osteomalacia in the UK: political action overdue
- Vitamin supplementation in pregnancy
- Vitamin D levels in hospice in-patients
- Representations of the health value of vitamin D supplementation in newspapers: media content analysis
- Vitamin D supplementation and testing in the UK: costly but ineffective?
- Vitamin D status in an Australian patient population: a large retrospective case series focusing on factors associated with variations in serum 25(OH)D
- Vitamin D: increasing supplement use among at-risk groups (NICE guideline PH56)