City
Epaper

Vitamin D may protect severe Covid infection, death: Study

By IANS | Updated: September 16, 2021 15:20 IST

London, Sep 16 Good amount of Vitamin D in the body before Covid-19 infection can prevent severe disease ...

Open in App

London, Sep 16 Good amount of Vitamin D in the body before Covid-19 infection can prevent severe disease and death, according to an international study.

A team from Trinity College in Ireland, University of Edinburgh in Scotland and Zhejiang University in China for the first time looked at both genetically-predicted and vitamin D levels as predicted by ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation key for vitamin D production in the skin.

When comparing the two variables, researchers found that correlation with measured vitamin D concentration in the circulation was three-fold stronger for UVB-predicted vitamin D level, compared to genetically-predicted.

The paper, published in the journal Scientific Reports, suggests that vitamin D may protect against severe Covid-19 disease and death.

"Our study supports the recommendation of vitamin D supplementation for not only the maintenance of bone and muscle health during the lockdown, but also the potential benefits in relation to protection from Covid-19," said Dr Xue Li, a researcher on the study from Zhejiang.

"Conducting a properly designed Covid-19 randomised controlled trial of vitamin D supplementation is critical. Until then, given that vitamin D supplements are safe and cheap, it is definitely advisable to take supplements and protect against vitamin D deficiency," added Professor Lina Zgaga, Associate Professor in epidemiology, at Trinity's School of Medicine

Further, ambient UVB radiation at an individual's place of residence preceding Covid-19 infection was found to be strongly and inversely associated with hospitalisation and death.

Previous studies have linked vitamin D deficiency with an increased susceptibility to viral and bacterial respiratory infections. Similarly, several observational studies found a strong correlation between vitamin D deficiency and Covid-19.

A study by researchers from the Azrieli Faculty of Medicine of Bar-Ilan University in Safed and the Galilee Medical Center (GMC) in Nahariya, Israel, showed that people with low vitamin D levels are at least 20 per cent more likely to die from Covid-19 than people who are not.

They found that being deficient in vitamin D before contracting Covid-19 has a direct impact on the disease's severity and mortality.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Lina ZgagairelandLondonTrinity CollegeUniversity Of EdinburghPremier of saAdministrative capitalTrinity's school of natural sciences
Open in App

Related Stories

CricketSA-W vs IRE-W 2nd ODI LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch South Africa Women vs Ireland Women Match In India

CricketBAN vs IRE, 3rd T20I: Bangladesh Clinch Series 2-1 After Dominant Eight-Wicket Win Over Ireland in Chattogram

CricketBAN vs IRE 2nd T20I LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch Bangladesh vs Ireland Match in India

CricketUAE to Host Ireland for Two-Match T20I Series Ahead of T20 World Cup 2026

CricketBAN vs IRE 1st T20I LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch Bangladesh vs Ireland Match in India

Health Realted Stories

HealthIndia reaffirms further healthcare support to Kabul during Afghan minister's visit

Health'Be alive to ground realities': SC refuse to entertain PIL challenged bottled water standards

HealthCRPF trooper dies of suspected cardiac arrest in J&K’s Anantnag

HealthIs high-fat cheese healthy for your brain?

HealthIndian researchers develop new peptide therapy to treat eye infections