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Vitamin D status, vitamin D intake, and sunlight exposure in adults adhering or not to periodic religious fasting for decades

Nikolaos E. Rodopaios, Anatoli Petridou, Vassilis Mougios, Alexandra-Aikaterini Koulouri, Eleni Vasara, Sousana Κ. Papadopoulou, Petros Skepastianos, Maria Hassapidou, Anthony G. Kafatos

2021International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We investigated whether periodic abstinence from foods of animal origin and a conservative lifestyle, with reduced sunlight exposure, affect vitamin D status. In a cross-sectional design, we measured the serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration and assessed dietary vitamin D intake and sunlight exposure in 200 adults adhering to religious fasting for decades and in 200 non-fasters, with no differences between groups in bone mineral density. Fasters showed lower 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration than non-fasters in winter and spring. Vitamin D intake and some indices of sunlight exposure (including two related to winter and spring) were lower in fasters, and 378 of the 400 participants exhibited vitamin D insufficiency or deficiency. In conclusion, individuals following a religious lifestyle had lower vitamin D intake, sunlight exposure and, at times, serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration than controls, although these differences did not impact bone health.

Topics & Concepts

SunlightVitamin D and neurologyVitaminSun exposurevitamin D deficiencyMedicineBone healthEndocrinologyInternal medicinePhysiologyBone mineralOsteoporosisPhysicsAstronomyDermatologyVitamin D Research StudiesNutritional Studies and DietMenstrual Health and Disorders