High doses of vitamin D taken one hour after sunburn significantly reduce skin redness, swelling, and inflammation, a small but timely new study reports.
image: nydailynews |
Participants were given either a placebo pill or 50,000, 100,000, or
200,000 IU of vitamin D one hour after getting small UV lamp burn on
their inner arm. Investigators followed subjects at various intervals
over a week. At the end of the seven days, skin biopsies were collected
for analysis.
Participants who consumed the highest doses of vitamin D reaped the
biggest benefits, including less skin inflammation 48 hours after the
burn. Participants with the highest blood levels of vitamin D also had
less skin redness and the greatest boost in skin barrier repair.
While synonymous with being a bone-builder, vitamin D isn’t associated with being an anti-inflammatory, researchers said.
“We hypothesize that vitamin D helps promote protective barriers in the
skin by rapidly reducing inflammation,” said lead author Kurt Lu, M.D.
“What we did not expect was that at a certain dose, vitamin D not only
was capable of suppressing inflammation, it was also activating skin
repair genes.”
Lu added that the amount of vitamin D in the trial far exceed the daily allowance of 400 IU. “But,” he said, “the results are promising and worthy of further study.”
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