If a 100 people take 50IU of Vitamin D, you get 100 different results.
Some get enough from minor sun exposure and maybe eating a fish now and then. Others need massive doses to get any results.
And yeah, it does not absorb well unless you eat some fat.
It took many months to get the levels back to normal. Vitamin D is one of those things that once you overdose, it takes many months for the levels to slowly come down after you stop supplementing.
Be careful with Vitamin D!
The downside to having high levels is plaque/calcium deposits in arteries, if I'm not mistaken. Which can be mitigated by taking K2.
All of the studies I've seen around Vitamin D supplementation has shown that the "safe level" reported today is way, way lower than it should be. People appear to be just fine taking 10k IUs for months on end, even 7 years in one study. I think what we're learning is that the "safe level" is a very wide spectrum; some people could possibly be harmed from a low level, whereas some people are perfectly fine at a very high level.
And some people, like those with MS (such as I) need to take more than usual. Someone I know has MS and takes 20k IU and gets regularly tested.
It's easy to double up if you decide to eat lunch outside because the weather is nice this month. I take 10k only if I'm indoors all day, and reduce or take none if I'm out.
> Treatment
> In almost every case, ceasing vitamin D intake, combined with a low-calcium diet and corticosteroid drugs, will allow for a full recovery within a month. Bisphosphonate drugs (which inhibit bone resorption) can also be administered.[2]
Regardless, blood levels need to be checked for this sort of thing and doses are not one-size-fits-all. I also once was taking 10k daily, for several months, and ended up just barely in excess territory with no noticeable symptoms. (I settled on taking 4k daily in the long term.)
Surprised to see just 4 weeks for a recovery. I got retested after 8 weeks (only minor improvement) and wasn't until 16 weeks until the test finally came back in range.
100% no dose is one-size-fits-all. I overdosed from taking a specialty multivitamin (it has a discord channel and everything). So was chatting with people taking the same vitamin, same dosages, also getting tested, but others had no issues at the same doses.
I guess I just absorb vitamin D with great efficiency, who knows.
That is what supplementing K2 with D3 is for, too.
Thanks for the tip though. I do not take it regularly so I think I'm fine. :D
The point is that from that N IU the 100 people will absorb anything from 0-N, it's very individual and varied.
The only way to be sure is to test your levels, which costs money every time. There really should be a simple and cheap home test kit for it. You'd sell millions every year just in the Nordics and Canada =)
I've been offered a (free) Vitamin D checkup exactly zero times. We should be getting them though, dunno why we don't.
Conversely, some studies have shown that 4k IU does contribute to hypercalcemia in a small number of cases (4 per 1000). So actually 4k is deemed "not completely safe" as a limit.
The point is, the amount you take needs to be adjusted by a clinician, as the safe range for you is unknowable otherwise.
Whether it has a "positive impact" on overall health (which I believe to be your point), that would be even more anecdotal and also impossible for me to narrow down whether that one factor had any significant effect, so I won't posit that. And I agree that from different studies I've read, the actual science on it is pretty varied and I haven't seen anything conclusive. Even this study notes their conclusion was "... among adults with suboptimal baseline vitamin D levels".
I'm pretty personally convinced that it was the supplements that helped here.
I think I might try daily 10000IU after showing my doctor how little it's moving the needle for me
Proceed with caution and listen to your body. Doctors were accusing every other thing than accepting whatever it did to my calcium / other electrolytes bothered my heart.
I took a blood test several weeks ago, my Vitamin D level was 14 ng/ml. I was so fatigued there were times I had to lay on my office floor because I didn't even have the energy to sit in my chair. I started taking 50k IU's weekly and then 10k IU's daily, and the results were dramatic. I went from having 0 energy to nearly normal. I also had soreness in my legs which went away.
I have no opinion on the matter, and am inclined to think there is at least some positive benefit. But YMMV