Vitamin D₃ Quick Reference
Page edition: 2024-05-13
Note: although this basenote is publicly-visible,
some links and responses may be IC members-only.
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Context
Vitamin D is a core program supplement. Unless
you are under 40, live near the equator,
spend most of your daytime outdoors,
year-round, with extensive skin exposure
(i.e. live an ancestral lifestyle), your
vitamin D levels are very likely
suboptimal.
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Contents
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General Information
The need for vitamin D has been part
of the program, going back at least
a decade, and is extensively discussed
in these books and program materials
(page numbers shown for U.S. print editions):
📖 Wheat
Belly Total Health
(2014): page 175
📖 Undoctored
(2017) page 272
📖 Wheat
Belly Revised & Expanded
(2019) page 243
📖 Super
Gut
(2022) page 160
🖵🗏 The
Crucial Role of Vitamin D (members)
🅑
WBB: Autoimmune
diseases and vitamin D (members)
🅑
WBB: Vitamin D:
Get the timing right (members)
🅑
WBB: 10 Things
You Probably Didn’t Know About Vitamin D:
Essential Info During a Pandemic (members)
🅑
WBB: Vitamin D:
What is the best form? (members)
🅑
WBB: Vitamin D
and Immunity (members)
🅑
WBB: Why sun
exposure may NOT be a reliable way to
obtain vitamin D (public)
🅑
WBB: Common
misconceptions surrounding vitamin D (public)
🅑
WBB: What are
the symptoms of vitamin D deficiency? (public)
🅑
WBB: Ten rules to
get your vitamin D just right (public)
🅑
WBB: How important
is Vitamin D? (public)
🅑
WBB: DIY vitamin D (public)
🅑
WBB: Is Vitamin
D Deficiency the Rule, rather Than
the Exception? (public)⇱ Return to ToC
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Program Vitamin D Target
Program target is based on a periodic blood test;
a 25-hydroxy vitamin D level of:
60 to 70 ng/mL (150-180 nmol/L)
See ⇩Testing
considerations below for more information.
Note that consensus nutrition is
only slowly catching up. The program’s
lower limit usually requires Vitamin D
intake well above common official
guidelines. Although the guidelines doubled a few years ago,
from 10µg (400 IU)
to 20µg (800 IU), they
are still usually sub-optimal.
Note also that FDA labelling standards shifted from
IU to µg (mcg) in 2020.
The program target usually requires a
vitamin D supplement, often in the range
150 µg±100µg
(6000 IU±4000 IU).
This is about 7.5× common RDAs.
Another rule of thumb for a starting portion is
1µg (40 IU) per pound of body weight,
or 2.2µg (88 IU) per kg.
Individual requirements vary with
age, situation and season, so getting
tested is strongly encouraged.⇱ Return to ToC
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Cautions
Response to vitamin D is an inverted
U-curve ∩, with benefits dropping off above
and below target titer. This is why
testing is needed to determine what’s optimal for you.
At extremely high values, there is some
risk of Hypervitaminosis D.
Supplementation above
250 µg (10,000 IU)
is not something to guess at. That said,
people starting the program with a high
BMI are apt to need more D₃ to hit
program 25OH-D3 target, and then less
over time as weight is lost.
Vitamin D supplementation may be
contraindicated in granulomatous
disorders, such as sarcoidosis.
Tanning salons may be completely ineffective
at stimulating vitamin D.⇱ Return to ToC
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Supplement considerations
The molecular form of vitamin D to
supplement is D₃ (cholecalciferol),
and not D₂ (ergocalciferol).
The supplement formulation to use is
oil-based (and not dry, such as tablet).
Gel caps are fine, as are liquid drops.
Don’t worry about any incidental D₃ in
any tablets you might be taking, but
also don’t expect it to be well absorbed
Again, testing settles this question.
Thousands of IUs are still just low
hundreds of micrograms (µg)
of actual D₃, so the overall product
formulation must be carefully considered
Store your D₃ supplement out of sunlight.
Refrigeration is fine.
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Portion timing
Take D₃ supplements early in the
morning, to mimic the circadian
effect of sunlight. Avoid taking
D₃ in the evening or at night,
as it may disrupt sleep.
Depending on your situation, seasonal
dose adjustment could be appropriate:
🖵🗏 Should
I Take Vitamin D Year Round? (members)
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Portion adjustment
The general rule of thumb for D₃ supplementation adjustment is:
2.5 µg/ng/ml (1 µg/nmol/L)
100 IU/ng/ml (40 IU/nmol/L)
So if your 25OH test came back at 40 ng/ml at the start of your program,
and using the middle of the target range
((60+70)÷2)=65 as a goal,
you might increase your vitamin D supplementation by:
2.5×(65-40) = +62.5 µg
100×(65-40) = +2500 IU
See Testing
for more information on dose
adjustment.⇱ Return to ToC
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Supplement suggestions
For the cautious buyer, subscription site
/℄\ConsumerLab.com
periodically tests Vitamin D supplements.
Check ingredients. In a stand-alone
D₃ gelcap, coconut, or MCT
oil are fine. While a credible olive
oil would be acceptable, the problem
is the ‘credible’ bit.
A high-oleic sunflower or safflower
oil might be a safer bet. Junk oils like
soybean, corn, peanut (or other grain or
legume) are distressingly common in
oil-based products, and indicate formulators
who are either clueless, or not terribly
concerned about your health. Entirely avoid
relying on tablets and dry capsules
(absorption issue). Most vitamin D
liquid (drop) product are fine, if they
use otherwise acceptable ingredients.
Because fish oil is also a core supplement in the program,
using a fish oil product that contains
D₃ is an interesting option. This normally
means having two forms of that fish oil on hand, one with
D₃, and the other without, due both to dose ratios, and
wanting to spread the fish oil across the
day. These two Sam’s Club Members Mark products
may work for you:
⎆600mg
Omega-3 from Fish Oil with 50 mcg Vitamin D3
Softgels
(540 mg DHA+EPA, 2000 IU D₃ per capsule)
⎆Triple
Strength Fish Oil Softgels
(900 mg DHA+EPA per capsule)
Similar products may be available from
⎆Nordic
Naturals
(275mg EPA+HDA, 12.5µg/500 IU D₃ per softgel).⇱ Return to ToC
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Testing considerations
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Test details
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Test Name |
Target Value Range
(See cell
footnote for target value references) |
Further Information
|
25-hydroxy
vitamin D
(CPT Code 82306) |
60 to 70 ng/mL
(150-180 nmol/L)¹
1. 🖵🗏The Crucial Role of Vitamin D |
Do not get the 1,25-dihydroxy
vitamin D test (CPT Code 82652). It is often
necessary to be quite clear about which test, or you’re at
some risk of getting the 1,25 test. |
If this test isn’t routinely covered
by your carrier, it’s often cheaper
to obtain it on your own, nanny state
permitting, from a walk-in lab,
perhaps via a Life⌬Extension
order, or via a home 🌢ZRT
Test Kit.
Self-directed price range: US$30.00-83.00
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Test day considerations
Fasting status:
It is not necessary to test D₃ fasting.
Day’s D supplement:
may be taken before or after draw
Time of day for test:
anytime
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Re-Test timing
After a supplement dose adjustment, wait ⎆at least
21 days before
re-test. Re-testing every
2-3 years is reasonable.⇱ Return to ToC