Vitamin D Deficiency May Be Linked To Diabetes Risk In Indian Women

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
According to a study published in the medical journal BMJ Open Diabetes Research and Care, lower vitamin D levels may be associated with
higher blood glucose levels in Indian women with pre-diabetes condition
Vitamin D is a fat soluble vitamin produced endogenously when ultraviolet rays from sunlight strike the skin and trigger its synthesis
To some extent it's present naturally in food items
The findings of the study show that 68 percent women are vitamin D deficient while almost 26 percent have been marked as vitamin D
insufficient
Just 5.5 percent of Indian women are vitamin D sufficient, which means they have vitamin D in sufficient amount.The cross-sectional
population-based study involved 797 women in 20-60 year age-group
Researchers measured and analysed vitamin D levels and fasting blood glucose of women who were categorised as pre-diabetic and found that
their fasting blood glucose was significantly higher in those with vitamin D deficiency as compared to those with vitamin D insufficiency
and sufficiency.The findings of the study are important as they show pre-diabetic women have tendency to develop type-2 diabetes mellitus
Researchers noted that pre-diabetics is associated with abdominal obesity, insulin resistance, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and
metabolic syndrome.Vitamin D deficiency is a major health problem
Some of the symptoms of vitamin D are frequent infections, fatigue, bone and back pain, impaired wound healing, bone loss, hair loss, muscle
pain and in some cases depression
A healthy vitamin D rich diet is said to help you load up on this sunshine vitamin
It is not just sunlight, but the following foods.1
MushroomsMushrooms can be cooked, baked or pan-fried and turned into yummy and healthy delight
Mushrooms can naturally produce vitamin D when exposed to sunlight.2
FishAll kinds of fish are rich in vitamin D
Oily or fatty fish are said to contain more vitamin D as compared to less oily fish
Try eating mackerel, salmon, trout, tuna or eel.3
EggEgg yolk is high in vitamin D content, but we'd suggest you eat a whole egg to reap maximum benefits.4
Soy milkSoy milk is a plant based milk produced by soaking dry soya beans and grinding them with water
It is one of the best sources to load up on vitamin D.5
CheeseCheese lover Well, no you may have a reason to eat that extra slice
It makes for one of the top vitamin D rich foods