Categories: Hormone Optimization

Vitamin D3: Why Most People Are Deficient and Why It Matters

Vitamin D3: Why Most People Are Deficient and Why It Matters

Despite its name, vitamin D3 isn’t technically a vitamin — it’s a hormone. True vitamins must be obtained from food because the body can’t make them. Vitamin D3, by contrast, is synthesized in the skin from cholesterol when exposed to UVB radiation. The naming convention stuck, but the physiology is hormonal.

And like other hormones, when D3 is deficient, the downstream effects are broad and significant.

How Deficient Are Most People?

Very. Brief, adequate sun exposure — think a few minutes of midday summer sun in a bathing suit — can generate up to 20,000 IU of vitamin D3. Most people rarely achieve even a fraction of that through sun exposure, and dietary sources provide a small fraction of what’s needed. The government’s recommended daily intake is widely considered conservative relative to what research on optimal levels suggests.

Regular testing is the only reliable way to know where you stand.

What Vitamin D3 Deficiency Contributes To

Low vitamin D3 levels are associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, heart failure, hypertension, and atrial fibrillation. It also plays a role in immune dysfunction, impaired glucose metabolism, and reduced muscle strength — all of which accelerate the aging process and increase injury risk.

Benefits of Optimizing Vitamin D3

  • Increased muscle strength by up to 20%
  • Analgesic (pain-relieving) effects in both acute and chronic pain
  • Reduced fracture risk in patients with osteoporosis or osteomalacia
  • Protection against multiple cancers — colorectal, breast, prostate, ovarian, renal cell, and others
  • Improved glucose tolerance and reduced risk of Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes
  • Fewer infections through enhanced immune function
  • Potential protective effects against Multiple Sclerosis and Rheumatoid Arthritis

Side Effects and Safe Upper Limits

Vitamin D3 is safe within appropriate ranges, but toxicity is possible at sustained doses above 40,000 IU per day. Symptoms of toxicity include nausea, excessive thirst and urination, weakness, and in severe cases, kidney damage. Levels above 100 ng/dL have also been associated with atrial fibrillation.

This is why we test and monitor — not guess.

Who Should Use Caution

Patients with hyperparathyroidism, granulomatous diseases (sarcoidosis, granulomatous tuberculosis), or certain cancers (oat cell carcinoma of the lung, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma) should only use vitamin D3 under physician supervision, as these conditions can cause abnormal calcium responses.

How It’s Supplied

Vitamin D3 is available as an oral capsule or softgel. Dosing varies significantly based on baseline levels, so lab testing before and during supplementation is standard practice at Albano Clinic.

If you’re looking for more information about how vitamin D3 might benefit your health, contact us.

Albano Clinic

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