Recurrent attacks of severe
abdominal pain, renal stones, abnormal moods, and an attack of pancreatitis
could well be due to an excess consumption of vitamin D. Dr Ambrish Mittal, a
Delhi based endocrinologist, says he sees several patients with abnormally high
blood calcium levels due to hyper-vitaminosis D, many of whom develop serious
consequences such as swelling of the pancreas.
Dr Vjay Kher, chief of
nephrology at Medanta Hospital agrees that there is a lurking epidemic of
vitamin D overdose resulting in high levels of blood calcium, that choking
kidneys and causing renal failure.
Vitamins are catalysts that
in very small doses, regulate actions of several enzymes and make our body
function smoothly. The discovery of this group of substances 100 years ago was
indeed a major leap in medicine. Dr George Wald was awarded the Nobel Prize for
discovering Vitamin A and proving its indispensable role in nurturing the rods
in the retina that allow us to perceive light, and hence provide us vision.
Deficiency of vitamins soon
came to be recognized, and the dramatic improvement of the patient’s condition
almost as soon as the therapeutic dose entered the body started appearing as
miracles. Scurvy and delayed wound
healing could now be treated with Vitamin C, Beriberi with Thiamine
(VitamineB1), osteomalacia with vitamin D, night-blindness and dry cornea with
Vitamin A and so on.
The question then that
started being asked was “Why wait for deficiencies to occur before
administering a therapeutic dose of the vitamin to cure it? If Vitamins are
“good” things, then an extra dose should benefit more!”
That unfortunately is not
always the case. While consuming high
doses of vitamins that are soluble in water (Vitamins B and C), and hence pass
out through urine if taken in excess, are perhaps still somewhat safe, the fat
soluble ones (Vitamins A, D, E, K) do not have an easy way out once they get
into our bodies. And that is when the problem starts.
The condition of
hyper-vitaminosis D has another angle. With the entry and popularity of bone
scans (dexa scans) and vitamin D
estimation tests in India, our scientists, started reporting that as many as
90% of Indians were deficient.
What they thought they were
raising was a national alarm in the population’s health interests however went
a bit awry. They failed to define what was “normal” Indian standard, and shied
away from asking that if almost everyone in the population showed a value that
was less than that measured in the West, could the “normal” for us Indians be
indeed different?
Vitamin D therefore came to
be prescribed in higher and higher doses to make our Indian bone measurements
meet up to that of the Westerners, and started echoing our national legacy of
trying to catch up with our colonial masters. And while Westerners are now
reducing their vitamin consumption, we are escalating our doses and gulping
them at considerable risk to our health.
As published in HT City ( Hindustan Times) dated 14th October, 2012.
As published in HT City ( Hindustan Times) dated 14th October, 2012.
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