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Breastfeeding
is very good for babies, but a recent report released by the American
Academy of Pediatrics has recommended that breastfeeding babies
be given vitamin D supplements to prevent them from developing rickets
or vitamin D deficiency.1
Other kids might need vitamin D supplements, too, depending upon
how much milk they drink and their exposure to sunlight.
Rickets is a
bone disorder caused by low levels of vitamin D in the body.2
Vitamin D helps to control the levels of calcium and phosphate in
the bones -- the important minerals that give bones their strength.
Low levels of vitamin D lead to a loss of calcium and phosphate
from the bones, causing bones to grow softer and weaker over time.
Rickets is most likely to occur during periods when children's bones
grow rapidly, and is most often found in children 6 months to 2
years of age.
Rickets was
once a major public health problem in the United States. Fortunately,
when cow's milk was fortified with vitamin D in the early 1930s,
rickets was almost completely eradicated.3
Although rickets
is rarely found in the United States, some researchers have reported
that rickets is making a comeback, particularly among African American
infants.4 Possible
explanations for this increase include an increase in the breastfeeding
of infants, fewer parents giving their children vitamin D supplements,
and parents being more careful to keep their infants out of the
sun. African Americans are more at risk because people with dark
skin absorb less vitamin D through sunlight.
In an attempt
to reduce the number of cases of rickets, the American Academy of
Pediatrics has issued new recommendations for using vitamin D to
prevent rickets and vitamin D deficiency in children.
The Academy
recommends that children consume 200 International Units (IU) of
vitamin D per day. This is the amount children would get from drinking
more than two cups of milk or formula a day. According to the Academy,
all infant formula sold in the United States are vitamin D-fortified,
so 500 milliliters (16.9 ounces) is enough to give infants their
daily dose of vitamin D.
An alternative
would be liquid multivitamin drops or tablets. Liquid multivitamin
drops with vitamin D are available for infants. Parents should give
their infants the amount recommended on the bottle. Multivitamin
tablets containing 400 IU of vitamin D per milliliter are widely
available for older children and adults. However, the Academy notes
that tablets containing only vitamin D, which contain up to 8000
IU per milliliter, are too strong for safe use for parents or children.
The Academy
recommends supplements of 200 IU of vitamin D for the following
groups:
- Infants who
are breastfed and do not receive adequate sunlight exposure. These
infants are at risk of developing vitamin D deficiency and rickets.
Parents should start giving these infants a supplement within
the first 2 months of their lives.
- Infants
who are not breastfed, but who drink less than 500 milliliters
of vitamin D-fortified formula or milk per day. Parents should
start giving these infants a supplement within the first 2 months
of their lives.
- Children
and adolescents who are not regularly exposed to sunlight and
who do not ingest at least 500 milliliters of vitamin D-fortified
milk per day.
People with
darker skin or who do not get much sunlight are also at increased
risk for developing rickets and vitamin D deficiencies and should
consider taking vitamin D supplements.
While exposure
to direct sunlight can increase levels of vitamin D in the body,
the Academy does not recommend using sunlight to prevent vitamin
D deficiencies or rickets. Exposure to sunlight can cause skin cancer,
and the use of sunscreen (which can protect the skin from the sun)
prevents the sun from increasing vitamin D levels.
The Academy
based their information on studies of infants in the U.S., Norway,
and China. While they note that less research is available on older
children and adolescents, they reached the same conclusion for these
older groups as for infants.
Note: The American
Academy of Pediatrics guidelines are available at www.aap.org/policy/s010116.html,
and a webpage addressing parents' questions about vitamin D supplements
can be found at www.aap.org/family/vitdpatients.htm.
References:
1
Gartner, L.M., M.D; Greer, F.R., MD and the Section on Breastfeeding
and Committee on Nutrition. (2003). Prevention of Rickets and Vitamin
D Deficiency: New guidelines for vitamin D intake. Pediatrics, 111(4),
pgs. 908-910. Available: www.aap.org/policy/s010116.html
2 See "Rickets"
in Medline Plus encyclopedia, available: www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000344.htm
3 American Council on Science
and Health (1999, 2nd edition). Much Ado About Milk. New York. Available:
www.acsh.org/publications/reports/milk99.pdf
4 For example: Rowe, P.M.
(2001). Why is rickets resurgent in the USA? Lancet, 357(9262),
pg. 1100; Kreiter S.R., Schwartz R.P., Kirkman H.N., Jr, Charlton
P.A., Calikoglu A.S., & Davenport, M.L. (2000). Nutritional
rickets in African American breast-fed infants. Journal of Pediatrics,
137(2), pgs. 153-7.

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