Hakim Ohood A, Hart Kathryn, McCabe Patrick, Berry Jacqueline, Francesca Robertson, Rhodes Lesley E, Spyrou Nicholas, Alfuraih Abdulrahman, Lanham-New Susan
Clinical Nutrition, Applied Medical Sciences, King AbdulAziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, United Kingdom.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2016 Nov;164:223-229. doi: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2016.03.025. Epub 2016 Mar 22.
It is known that skin pigmentation reduces the penetration of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) and thus photosynthesis of 25-hydroxvitamin D (25(OH)D). However ethnic differences in 25(OH)D production remain to be elucidated.
The aim of this study was to investigate differences in vitamin D production between UK South Asian and Caucasian postmenopausal women, in response to a defined and controlled exposure to UVR.
Seventeen women; 9 white Caucasian (skin phototype II and III), 8 South Asian women (skin phototype IV and V) participated in the study, acting as their own controls. Three blood samples were taken for the measurement of vitamin D status during the run in period (9days, no sunbed exposure) after which, all subjects underwent an identical UVR exposure protocol irrespective of skin colour (9 days, 3 sun bed sessions, 6, 8 and 8min respectively with approximately 80% body surface exposed). Skin tone was measured four times during the study.
Despite consistently lower 25(OH)D levels in South Asian women, they were shown to synthesise vitamin D as efficiently as Caucasians when exposed to the same dose of UVR. Interestingly, the baseline level of vitamin D rather than ethnicity and skin tone influenced the amount of vitamin D synthesised.
This study have found no ethnic differences in the synthesis of 25(OH)D, possibly due to the baseline differences in 25(OH)D concentration or due to the small population size used in this study. Applying mixed linear model, findings indicated no effect of ethnicity and skin tone on the production of vitamin D; baseline level and length of exposure were the critical factors. To confirm that ethnicity and skin tone has no effect on 25(OH)D production, a larger sample size study is required that considers other ethnic groups with highly pigmented skin. Initial vitamin D status influences the amount of UVB needed to reach equal serum concentrations.
已知皮肤色素沉着会降低紫外线辐射(UVR)的穿透率,从而减少25-羟基维生素D(25(OH)D)的合成。然而,25(OH)D生成中的种族差异仍有待阐明。
本研究旨在调查英国南亚裔和白种人绝经后女性在接受规定且可控的UVR照射后,维生素D生成的差异。
17名女性参与了该研究,其中9名白种人(皮肤光型为II型和III型),8名南亚裔女性(皮肤光型为IV型和V型),她们均作为自身对照。在初始阶段(9天,不进行日光浴床照射)采集三份血样以测定维生素D状态,之后,所有受试者不论肤色如何,均接受相同的UVR照射方案(9天,3次日光浴床照射,分别为6、8和8分钟,约80%的身体表面暴露)。在研究过程中对肤色进行了四次测量。
尽管南亚裔女性的25(OH)D水平始终较低,但当暴露于相同剂量的UVR时,她们合成维生素D的效率与白种人相同。有趣的是,维生素D的基线水平而非种族和肤色影响了合成的维生素D量。
本研究未发现25(OH)D合成中的种族差异,这可能是由于25(OH)D浓度的基线差异或本研究中使用的样本量较小。应用混合线性模型,结果表明种族和肤色对维生素D的生成没有影响;基线水平和暴露时间是关键因素。为确认种族和肤色对25(OH)D生成没有影响,需要进行更大样本量的研究,纳入其他皮肤色素沉着程度高的种族群体。初始维生素D状态会影响达到相同血清浓度所需的UVB量。