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As the latest wave of COVID-19 shows no signs of abating, University of South Australia experts say it's not just booster ...
People with a vitamin D deficiency are 36% more likely to require hospitalization from a COVID infection, researchers report ...
Adults with vitamin D deficiency may have lower COVID-19 vaccination antibody levels 9 months after the final vaccine dose compared with those with normal vitamin D levels, according to a brief ...
However, an August 2020 study published in Metabolism did not find conclusive evidence between vitamin D levels and the risk of COVID-19 infection or severity. And a June 2021 study published in ...
Among non-severe COVID-19 patients, vitamin D supplementation was associated with a -0.95-day difference in hospital length of stay. Potential benefits could exist in other groups, but this awaits ...
Vitamin D, produced in the lungs, modulates immune responses and may impact COVID-19 severity. VDR gene polymorphisms affecting VDR function are associated with immune responses.
As this is both a novel virus and disease, further research is needed to bolster the relationship between vitamin D and COVID-19, but at present, the data suggests a potentially strong relationship.
As the latest wave of COVID-19 shows no signs of abating, University of South Australia experts say it’s not just booster shots that could offer protection – healthy levels of vitamin D may also play ...
Low vitamin D levels are linked to a 36% higher risk of COVID-19 hospitalization, though not infection. Experts suggest ...
As the latest wave of COVID-19 shows no signs of abating, University of South Australia experts say it's not just booster ...
An analysis of UK Biobank participants shows that low levels of vitamin D increase the odds of COVID-19 hospitalisation but ...
Meltzer and colleagues studied 489 University of Chicago Medicine patients (mean age 49 years, 75% women) whose vitamin D levels were determined in the 2 months before being tested for COVID-19.