City
Epaper

Vitamin D supplements do not prevent Type 2 diabetes risk: Study

By IANS | Updated: May 26, 2022 16:35 IST

Tokyo, May 26 Daily vitamin D supplements do not seem to prevent the development of Type 2 diabetes ...

Open in App

Tokyo, May 26 Daily vitamin D supplements do not seem to prevent the development of Type 2 diabetes in people already at high risk of the condition, finds a study.

Type 2 diabetes affects around 480 million people worldwide, and is predicted to increase to 700 million by 2045. Another half a billion people have impaired glucose tolerance or pre-diabetes, or higher than normal blood sugar levels that, if left untreated, can develop into Type 2 diabetes.

Some studies have shown that Vitamin D deficiency is associated with an increased risk of future diabetes, but trials of Vitamin D supplements for preventing the condition have shown inconsistent results.

The new study, published by The BMJ, shows that supplements had no clinically meaningful effect in high risk adults, but suggest there may be a benefit for people with insufficient insulin secretion, although this finding remains unclear.

In the study, the team assessed whether eldecalcitol - an active form of vitamin D used to treat osteoporosis in Japan - could reduce the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes among people with impaired glucose tolerance.

They analysed 1,256 Japanese adults with impaired glucose tolerance recruited from three hospitals in Japan and were divided into two groups: a standard daily dose of eldecalcitol (630 participants) or placebo (626 participants). They were assessed for diabetes every three months over a three-year follow-up period.

During this period, the researchers found no meaningful differences between groups in those who developed diabetes (12.5 per cent in the eldecalcitol group and 14 per cent in the placebo group) or whose blood sugar levels returned to normal (23 per cent in the eldecalcitol group and 20 per cent in the placebo group).

The team did, however, find a significant increase in both lower back and hip bone mineral densities among those taking eldecalcitol compared with placebo.

"Although treatment with eldecalcitol did not significantly reduce the incidence of diabetes among people with pre-diabetes, the results suggested the potential for a beneficial effect of eldecalcitol on people with insufficient insulin secretion," said researchers, calling for further study to determine whether vitamin D is beneficial to people with pre-diabetes.

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: japanTokyo
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalBengaluru: Class 7 Student Dies by Suicide; Police Investigate Possible Link to Japanese Web Series ‘Death Note’

InternationalEarthquake of Magnitude 8.8 Is Equal to Explosion of 15,900 Atomic Bombs Like Hiroshima, Claims Grok

InternationalWhales Washed Ashore in Japan After Tsunami Hits Island Nation; Videos Surface

InternationalTsunami in US, Japan and Russia: Did New Baba Vanga's July 2025 Prediction Come True? Internet Buzzes With Ryo Tatsuki's Claims

InternationalTsunami Warning Issued for US States and Japan After 8.8-Magnitude Earthquake Strikes Off Russian Coast

Health Realted Stories

HealthAyush seminar to boost ayurveda‑based paediatric healthcare

HealthIIT Kharagpur launches healthcare and technology school to train youth as health professionals

HealthNovel live type 1, 3 oral polio vaccines show promise in phase 1 trial

HealthStudy explains why loss of smell is associated with Alzheimer's disease

HealthHighly sensitive people more likely to experience depression, anxiety: Study