Despite the paucity of scientific documentation of this phenomenon, I am continuing to witness extraordinary increases in HDL cholesterol levels with vitamin D supplementation.
I've touched on the interaction of vitamin D supplementation with HDL in The Heart Scan Blog previously:
Vitamin D: Treatment for metabolic syndrome?
HDL for Dummies
At first, I thought it was attributable to other factors. In real life, most people don't modify one factor at a time. They reduce
processed carbohydrates/eliminate wheat and cornstarch, lose weight, add or increase omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil, begin niacin, increase exercise and physical activity. All these efforts also impact on HDL.
Among the many things I do, I consult on complex lipid (cholesterol) disorders (complex hyperlipidemias) in my office. A substantial number of these people carry a diagnosis of hypoalphalipoproteinemia, a mouthful that simply means these people are unable to manufacture much apoprotein A1, the principal protein of HDL cholesterol particles. As a result, people with hypoalphalipoproteinemia have HDL cholesterol levels in the neighborhood of 20-30 mg/dl--very low. They are also at high risk for heart disease and stroke.
Encourage these people to exercise, attain ideal weight, eliminate wheat and cornstarch: HDL increases 5 mg/dl or so.
Add niacin, HDL increases another 5-10 mg/dl.
Perhaps we're now sitting somewhere around an HDL of 35-40 mg/dl--better, but hardly great.
Add vitamin D to achieve our target serum level . . . HDL jumps to 50, 60, 70, even 90 mg/dl.
The first few times this occurred, I thought it was an error or fluke. But now that I've witnessed this effect many dozens of time, I am convinced that it is real. Just today, I saw a 40-year old man whose starting HDL was 25 mg/dl increase to 87 mg/dl.
Responses like this are supposed to be impossible. Before vitamin D, I had never witnessed increases of this magnitude.
Not all therapies for raising HDL raise the important large (also known as HDL2b) fraction. With lipoprotein analyses, it appears that is principally the large fraction of HDL that rises with vitamin D supplementation.
Why? How?
That I can't tell you. But for those of you struggling with low HDL cholesterols despite your best efforts, vitamin D can make a world of difference.
An interesting corollary: If super-high HDL cholesterols are associated with extreme longevity, as they are with centenarians, does raising HDL to extraordinary levels with vitamin D lead to longer, healthier life, all the way up to age 110 years?
Again, no answers, but an interesting thought. And one I'd bet on. (And I'm not selling vitamin D.)
Monday, August 18, 2008
Vitamin D and HDL
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15 comments:
If you don't mind, how much Vitamin D do these people take? Do they take it in divided doses or all at once?
Dr. Davis, very exciting info!
Could you comment on the typical time lag seen in improved HDL as a response to vitamin D supplementation?
How do your observations jive with research showing that vitamin D inhibits apo-A1, which appears to confer greater protection against heart disease than HDL?
Wehmeier K, Beers A, Haas MJ, Wong NC, Steinmeyer A, Zugel U, Mooradian AD (2005). "Inhibition of apolipoprotein AI gene expression by 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D3". Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1737 (1): 16–26. PMID 16236546.
You might not be selling vitamin D... but these guys are!
For Vitamin D, Drink Schlitz!
Perhaps you could work this into your daily vitamin protocol...
I just noticed that I've been taking a Vit D and fish oil gel cap every time I read one of your posts about them, to make up for my 'forget' days 8^)
Just wanted to say thanks for your observations, that's very interesting. Maybe someone will catch on and do a clinical trial. Perhaps vitamin D will be the long-awaited HDL-raiser.
Hopefully some drug company will create an analog they can patent. Just kidding.
Because I have high LP(a)I take Niacin,exercise,mostly lean meats and veg/fruit diet. I have kept acurate blood draw records since 2002.Starting HDL was 50,had risen to mid 60's by 2007. Added 2000mg Vitamin D oil base gel caps 07 and 08. Last blood draw HDL was 85. I know it worked for me. It had no affect on LP(a)unfortunately remaining at 30 - 40. Thanks Dr Davis for making this known on your blog, it should help many.
I have HDL of 103, how common is this? I can't find much information about HDL levels this high...
Missbossy -- funny! Yeah, a comedian (?) used to joke that he took vitamins with his beer so that while he was tearing himself down he was also building himself up. :)
I have been taking 6000 units Vit D3 daily to achieve measured blood vitamin D level (25-OH-vitamin D3) of 60 ng/ml. Your mileage may vary.
What about getting some sunshine? Does that work?
I'm also interested in your response regarding vitamin D inhibiting apo-A1. It appears contrary to improved HDL.
In my own case, vitamin D hasn't done anything for my HDL. I started with a D level at 21 and my HDL has hovered in the 27-34 range. Raised my D levels to 54, and my HDL sunk near the low point of 27
I also had my Apo A1 tested separately, but my doctor isn't entirely sure how to read the data. My Apo A1 is in the reference range provided by the lab, although a bit towards the lower end. I have no way in determining if it's truly decent or not though.
I started with a "D" level of 17 and an HDL of 63, started taking "D" supplements and raised my "D" level to exactly 60 and my HDL went down to 56.
I too started with a low HDL of 35, added Vitamin D3, 3-4,000iu/daily and my HDL went to 71! I am a firm believer of Vitamin D>
I'd like too see a reference to published research linking D3 supplementation to greater HDL. I think D3 does have anti-atherosclerotic properties - despite what it does at a high dose. When high doses are given to animals on a high fat diet, vitamin D3 actually induces atherosclerosis. This is a common model for atherosclerosis in the lab which might account for why so many doctors seem to have missed the clinical benefits for D3 in heart disease. Since D3 induces self-tolerance (partly via IL-10) and atherosclerosis has recently been described as an autoimmune condition caused by underfunctional regulatory T-cells, at a normal dose D3 probably has a protective effect against atherosclerosis.
I would appreciate if anyone can help answer as to what is the daily dosage(in I.U's) of Vitamin D required to have an effect on raising the HDL number?
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