Vitamin D3 Might Ease Menstrual Cramps
All women who were helped initially had vitamin D levels in the lowest 25% of
normal at the outset of the study. They were given a single dose of
300,000 IUs of D3 five days before the onset of their menstrual cycle.
That's a very large amount of vitamin D. Perhaps simply ingesting a
higher amount (higher than the 600 IU currently recommended) can lead to a build
up of normal vitamin D in the body which could eliminate such a huge
amount.
http://health.usnews.com/health-news/news/articles/2012/02/28/vitamin-d3-migh...
Vitamin D3 Might Ease Menstrual Cramps
Small, early trial suggests supplement can relieve pain, but safety
questions remain
February 28, 2012
TUESDAY, Feb. 28 (HealthDay News) -- Menstrual cramps are the bane of many
women, but new research suggests that a form of vitamin D may one day be added
to the meager list of pain relievers for the sometimes disabling condition.
A small study in Italy found that a single, high dose of cholecalciferol --
also known as vitamin D3 -- was linked to a marked reduction in menstrual
cramps, with the largest benefits observed in women reporting the most pain at
the beginning of the study.
U.S. experts cautioned that it's too early to recommend vitamin D3 to those
experiencing cramps -- estimated to occur in at least half of all
reproductive-age women -- because the study didn't delve into possible long-term
risks of taking high doses.
"It's provocative in the fact that the results are pretty amazing,"
said Dr. Robert Graham, an internist and vitamin D expert at Lenox Hill Hospital
in New York City. "But the dose [given] is a lot more than conventionally
given for any condition."
The study was published Feb. 27 in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
In the study, 40 Italian women were split into two groups: one receiving a
single oral dose of 300,000 IUs of vitamin D3 and the other getting a placebo
five days before the expected start of their menstrual periods.
After two months, average pain scores dropped 41 percent for women assigned
vitamin D treatment, while no difference in pain was reported in the placebo
group.
Also, the women who took vitamin D reported no need to use nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS), such as the pain reliever ibuprofen, to manage
their pain in the two-month study period, while 40 percent of those assigned to
placebo reported using an NSAID at least once.
Menstrual cramps, known by the medical name dysmenorrhea, typically begin
just before or at the start of a woman's menstrual period and can last several
days. Experts attribute the pelvic pain to prostaglandins, a hormone-like
substance that contributes to the contraction and relaxation of muscles and
blood vessels.
Vitamin D3 apparently helped hamper prostaglandin production in study
participants, easing their pain, said Dr. Jill Rabin, chief of obstetrics and
gynecology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park, N.Y. The
vitamin is also known to have anti-inflammatory effects, Rabin added.
"The bottom line is, it looked like it worked," said Rabin, also
head of urogynecology at the hospital. "It was a very well-done study, but
my comment is, it was one study. It asks more questions than it answers, which
is the sign of a good trial."
The 300,000 IU dose of vitamin D3 given in the study also far exceeds the
daily intake of 600 IUs recommended for American women of reproductive age, both
Graham and Rabin said. And since the study period lasted only two months, there
was no way to tell whether such a high dose produced any toxic long-term
effects.
Currently used methods of controlling menstrual cramps include NSAIDs and --
among those with severe pain -- birth control pills. But both have potential
risks: NSAID users can experience stomach or kidney troubles, for example, while
birth control pills are linked to blood clots in certain women. The cost of
vitamin D supplements would be roughly comparable with both of these remedies.
Vitamin D use has also been widely studied as a possible preventive for many
other conditions, including heart disease, certain cancers and autoimmune
disorders.
The Italian study participants all had blood levels of vitamin D measuring in
the lowest 25 percent of normal at the study's outset, although the researchers
didn't report the womens' blood levels afterward. Experts wondered if women with
higher blood levels would experience such dramatic cramp relief as observed in
the study.
Graham and Rabin agreed that much larger trials should be done before they
would recommend vitamin D3 use to any of their patients for cramp relief.
"From a symptomatic standpoint, it's something to be considered, but
more studies are needed to see the risks and benefits," Graham said.
"Studies like this are starting to show that vitamin D is ubiquitous in
receptors in our bodies . . . but it needs further explanation."