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Over 65? Take lots of vitamin D to prevent a fall

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Over 65? Take lots of vitamin D to prevent a fall

Important news for seniors: A daily dose of vitamin D cuts your risk of falling substantially, researchers reported today.

But not just any dose will do. “It takes 700 to 1000 international units (IU) of vitamin D per day and nothing less will work,” Dr. Heike A. Bischoff-Ferrari, who directs the Center on Aging and Mobility at the University of Zurich, Switzerland, noted in an email to Reuters Health.

Those recommendations – which are higher than those by the U.S. Institute of Medicine — are based on the results of eight studies that looked at vitamin D supplements for fall prevention among more than 2,400 adults aged 65 and older. Falls were not notably reduced with daily doses of vitamin D lower than 700 IU.

An analysis of all eight studies, posted online today in the British Medical Journal, add weight to several others which have shown that vitamin D improves strength and balance, and bone health in the elderly, the researchers note.

Each year, 1 in 3 people aged 65 and older, and 1 in 2 aged 50 and older, fall at least once. Nine percent of these mishaps require a trip to the emergency room and around 6 percent result in a fracture. Many elderly people who fall end up in nursing homes.

“Falls are important events to prevent,” Bischoff-Ferrari said, “and 700 to 1000 IU of vitamin D per day is safe and inexpensive,” but it’s higher than the currently recommended by the Institute of Medicine for older adults. (The Institute recommends 400 IU per day for adults between age 51 and 70, and 600 IU per day for those aged 70 years and over.)

The current findings, Bischoff-Ferrari said, provide an argument to revise the recommendations. They looked at two forms of the vitamin: Vitamin D3, or cholecalciferol, which is more readily absorbed by the body and more potent than vitamin D2, or ergocalciferol, the form often found in multivitamins.

“At the higher dose of 700 to 1000 IU vitamin D, the benefit on fall prevention is significant — at least 19 percent, 26 percent with vitamin D3,” Bischoff-Ferrari said.

While vitamin D3 seemed more potent than D2, forms of vitamin D marketed as “active,” such as calcitriol, did not seem to be more effective than standard vitamin D supplements, the researchers found. Such active forms are more expensive and carry a higher risk of elevated calcium levels, which have been linked to hormone problems and cancer.

Moreover, the effect of 700 to 1000 IU vitamin D daily is kicks in “in a few months and is sustained over years, and the benefit is independent of age and present in those living at home and those living in nursing homes,” Bischoff-Ferrari noted.

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Half of babies born in rich world will live to 100

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Half of babies born in rich world will live to 100

More than half of babies born in rich nations today will live to be 100 years old if current life expectancy trends continue, according to Danish researchers.

Increasing numbers of very old people could pose major challenges for health and social systems, but the research showed that may be mitigated by people not only living longer, but also staying healthier in their latter years.

“Very long lives are not the distant privilege of remote future generations — very long lives are the probable destiny of most people alive now in developed countries,” Kaare Christensen of the Danish Aging Research Center wrote on Friday in a study in the Lancet medical journal.

The study used Germany as a case study and showed that by 2050, its population will be substantially older and smaller than now — a situation it said was now typical of rich nations.

This means smaller workforces in rich nations will have to shoulder an ever-greater burden of ballooning pension and healthcare requirements of the old.

Many governments in developed nations are already making moves toward raising the typical age of retirement to try to cope with aging populations.

The researchers said this was an important strategy, and added that if part-time work was considered for more of the workforce, that could have yet more benefits.

“If people in their 60s and early 70s worked much more than they do nowadays, then most people could work fewer hours per week,” they wrote. “Preliminary evidence suggests that shortened working weeks over extended working lives might further contribute to increases in life expectancy and health.”

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Overweight mothers linked to infant heart defects

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Overweight mothers linked to infant heart defects

Women who are overweight or obese when they get pregnant are more likely to give birth to children with congenital heart defects, according to a U.S. government study released on Thursday.

The study, conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, concluded that women who were overweight or obese at the time they became pregnant were 18 percent more likely to give birth to babies with heart defects, while severely obese women had a 30 percent increased risk.

The babies had problems including obstructive defects on the right side of the heart and defects in the tissue separating the heart’s two upper chambers, the researchers reported in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

“Congenital heart defects are the most common types of birth defect, and among all birth defects, they are a leading cause of illness, death and medical expenditures,” said Dr. Edwin Trevathan, a CDC expert on birth defects and developmental disabilities.

The CDC, the U.S. government’s disease watchdog, recommends that overweight women work with their doctors to achieve a healthy weight before pregnancy.

Researchers examined the health of 6,440 infants with congenital heart defects and 5,673 infants without problems, all of whose mothers were interviewed as part of the CDC’s National Birth Defects Prevention Study.

They assessed obesity according to each woman’s body mass index, or BMI, which relates weight to height. A woman 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighing 190 pounds (86 kg) would have a BMI of 31.6, while a woman of the same height who weighs 160 pounds (72 kg) would have a BMI of 26.6.

The researchers defined overweight as a BMI of 25 to 29.9, moderate obesity as a BMI of 30 to 34.9 and severe obesity as a BMI of 35 or above.

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