Hligh-Dose Vitamin D Supplements Are Not Associated with Linear Growth in a Large Finnish Cohort

High vitamin D intake in childhood has been suggested to have an adverse influence on linear growth. In Finland, in the mid-1960s the official recommendation for infant vitamin D supplementation was 2000 IU/d (50 mu g/d). We investigated whether high-dose vitamin D supplementation in infancy was ass...

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Main Authors: Hypponen, E, Fararouei, M, Sovio, U, Hartikainen, A, Pouta, A, Robertson, C, Whittaker, JC, Jarvelin, M
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: AMER SOC NUTRITIONAL SCIENCE 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1301588/
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1301588 2023-05-15T17:42:39+02:00 Hligh-Dose Vitamin D Supplements Are Not Associated with Linear Growth in a Large Finnish Cohort Hypponen, E Fararouei, M Sovio, U Hartikainen, A Pouta, A Robertson, C Whittaker, JC Jarvelin, M 2011-05 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1301588/ unknown AMER SOC NUTRITIONAL SCIENCE J NUTR , 141 (5) 843 - 848. (2011) CHILDREN RISK Article 2011 ftucl 2015-04-09T22:12:45Z High vitamin D intake in childhood has been suggested to have an adverse influence on linear growth. In Finland, in the mid-1960s the official recommendation for infant vitamin D supplementation was 2000 IU/d (50 mu g/d). We investigated whether high-dose vitamin D supplementation in infancy was associated with subsequent growth in height. We used data from a prospective population-based birth cohort study including all children due to be born in the 2 northernmost provinces in Finland in 1 366 (12,058 live-births, coverage 96%). Information on each participant's height was collected at birth and ages 1, 14, and 31 y, as were possible confounding factors (data for analyses available from 10,060 singletons). Information on the frequency and dose of vitamin D supplementation was collected in 1967 when participants were 1 y of age. A weak association was found between frequency of vitamin D supplementation with greater height at age 1 y (P = 0.005), which was explained by birth characteristics and maternal and social factors (adjusted P = 0.34). Neither frequency nor dose of vitamin D supplementation was associated with height at 14 or 31 y (P > 0.13). To conclude, contrary to proposed evidence suggesting that vitamin D has a negative influence on growth rate at a dosage of similar to 2000 IU/d, supplementation at this level in the Northern Finland Birth Cohort was not associated with reduced height at any age studied. J. Nutr. 141: 843-848, 2011. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northern Finland University College London: UCL Discovery
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
topic CHILDREN
RISK
spellingShingle CHILDREN
RISK
Hypponen, E
Fararouei, M
Sovio, U
Hartikainen, A
Pouta, A
Robertson, C
Whittaker, JC
Jarvelin, M
Hligh-Dose Vitamin D Supplements Are Not Associated with Linear Growth in a Large Finnish Cohort
topic_facet CHILDREN
RISK
description High vitamin D intake in childhood has been suggested to have an adverse influence on linear growth. In Finland, in the mid-1960s the official recommendation for infant vitamin D supplementation was 2000 IU/d (50 mu g/d). We investigated whether high-dose vitamin D supplementation in infancy was associated with subsequent growth in height. We used data from a prospective population-based birth cohort study including all children due to be born in the 2 northernmost provinces in Finland in 1 366 (12,058 live-births, coverage 96%). Information on each participant's height was collected at birth and ages 1, 14, and 31 y, as were possible confounding factors (data for analyses available from 10,060 singletons). Information on the frequency and dose of vitamin D supplementation was collected in 1967 when participants were 1 y of age. A weak association was found between frequency of vitamin D supplementation with greater height at age 1 y (P = 0.005), which was explained by birth characteristics and maternal and social factors (adjusted P = 0.34). Neither frequency nor dose of vitamin D supplementation was associated with height at 14 or 31 y (P > 0.13). To conclude, contrary to proposed evidence suggesting that vitamin D has a negative influence on growth rate at a dosage of similar to 2000 IU/d, supplementation at this level in the Northern Finland Birth Cohort was not associated with reduced height at any age studied. J. Nutr. 141: 843-848, 2011.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hypponen, E
Fararouei, M
Sovio, U
Hartikainen, A
Pouta, A
Robertson, C
Whittaker, JC
Jarvelin, M
author_facet Hypponen, E
Fararouei, M
Sovio, U
Hartikainen, A
Pouta, A
Robertson, C
Whittaker, JC
Jarvelin, M
author_sort Hypponen, E
title Hligh-Dose Vitamin D Supplements Are Not Associated with Linear Growth in a Large Finnish Cohort
title_short Hligh-Dose Vitamin D Supplements Are Not Associated with Linear Growth in a Large Finnish Cohort
title_full Hligh-Dose Vitamin D Supplements Are Not Associated with Linear Growth in a Large Finnish Cohort
title_fullStr Hligh-Dose Vitamin D Supplements Are Not Associated with Linear Growth in a Large Finnish Cohort
title_full_unstemmed Hligh-Dose Vitamin D Supplements Are Not Associated with Linear Growth in a Large Finnish Cohort
title_sort hligh-dose vitamin d supplements are not associated with linear growth in a large finnish cohort
publisher AMER SOC NUTRITIONAL SCIENCE
publishDate 2011
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1301588/
genre Northern Finland
genre_facet Northern Finland
op_source J NUTR , 141 (5) 843 - 848. (2011)
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