
Higher Doses Of Vitamin D Did Not Reduce Falls In At Risk Older Adults
- byDoctor News Daily Team
- 18 February, 2025
- 0 Comments
- 0 Mins

Falls in older adults are very common and are tied to serious consequences including risk of fractures, other injuries and.In addition to this it is a huge challenge for health care teams with economic consequences. Although Vitamin D use is linked with reduction in falls but results of various studies are not conclusive.
Researchers conducted a randomized trial to compare the effects of 4 doses of vitamin D3 supplements on falls in elderly population.
They found that compared with a lower dose, higher doses of vitamin D supplementation did not reduce falls in older persons at high risk for falls. In addition, several analyses raised safety concerns about vitamin D3 doses of 1000 IU/d or higher. The findings are published in Annals of Internal Medicine.
Some studies have suggested that vitamin D supplements might reduce the risk for falls in older adults; however, evidence has been inconsistent, possibly because of differences in dosage.
Researchers from Johns Hopkins University compared four doses of vitamin D3 to determine whether vitamin D supplementation reduces the risk for falls, and if so, at what dosage. The researchers randomly assigned 514 participants, aged 70 years and older, with elevated fall risk and low vitamin D blood levels to receive 200 (control), 1000, 2000, or 4000 IU/d of vitamin D3. During the dose-finding phase, the best non-control dose for preventing falls was selected. In the subsequent confirmatory phase, participants previously assigned to receive non-control doses received the best dose, and 174 new participants were randomly assigned to receive 200 IU/d or the best dose. The researchers found that vitamin D3 supplementation at doses of 1000 IU/d or higher did not prevent falls compared with 200 IU/d. No analysis found a benefit of higher dose vitamin D supplements, while some analyses suggested that the higher doses of vitamin D supplements increased the risk of serious falls and falls with hospitalization.
For further reference log on to:
:https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M20-3812
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