研究表明 维生素D缺乏可能增加流产的风险
Women not receiving enough vitamin D take longer to get pregnant and may even increase their risk of having a miscarriage, a study has found. Researchers analyzed levels of the essential nutrient in the blood, before pregnancy and eight weeks after, of 1,200 women who had experienced a previous pregnancy loss and were hoping to conceive again. Those whose vitamin D levels were in line with recommended levels prior to conception were 15% more likely to have a live birth, and risk of miscarriage decreased as levels of the vitamin rose. "Our findings suggest that vitamin D may play a protective role in pregnancy," said Dr Sunni Mumford from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Rockville, Maryland. The findings add to earlier studies which had suggested higher levels of vitamin D were beneficial in women undergoing in vitro fertilization. In fact, vitamin D is also essential for the human body to absorb calcium and other minerals from the food and drinks we consume. Deficiencies can cause bone weakness and deformities, particularly in children who are growing rapidly where it can lead to rickets. |