Vitamin D, despite the name, is actually a hormone precursor — and the silent architect of child growth. According to 2023 Hacettepe + Marmara University data, 52% of children aged 6-17 in Turkey have insufficient vitamin D (<20 ng/mL).
What does vitamin D do?
Bone metabolism (classical role)
- Regulates intestinal calcium + phosphorus absorption
- Stimulates osteoblast activity → bone mineralization
- Modulates PTH and bone resorption
- Deficiency: rickets (children), osteomalacia (adults)
On growth plates
- Regulates chondrocyte proliferation
- Strengthens IGF-1 (GH mediator) signaling
- In severe deficiency, height velocity slows (1-2 cm/year loss)
Immunity
- Activates T-helper cells
- Reduces autoimmune disease risk (Type 1 diabetes, MS, IBD)
- Reduces upper respiratory infections (RCT evidence)
Other
- Muscle function — 20% drop in falls (proven in elderly, studied in children)
- Mood and depression link (emerging literature)
- May reduce some cancers (colorectal, breast) — epidemiological
What's a normal level?
The blood marker is 25-hydroxy vitamin D (25-OH-D).
| Level (ng/mL) | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| > 30 | Sufficient (target 30-50) |
| 20-29 | Insufficient |
| 10-19 | Deficient |
| < 10 | Severely deficient |
Modern pediatric endocrinology now targets 40-60 ng/mL as optimal — especially during growth, in child athletes, and in pubertal years.
Why is deficiency so high in Turkey?
Geographic + climatic
- Latitude (36-42°N) — winter (Oct-Mar) UV-B is very low
- Air pollution (Istanbul, Ankara) blocks UV-B
Cultural + dress
- Modest dress patterns — limits skin exposure for women and adolescent girls
- Sunscreen reduces UV-B by 95% even in summer
Diet
- Turkish diet has limited vitamin-D foods: salmon, egg yolk, fortified milk — rarely consumed regularly
- Breast milk has low vitamin D (40 IU/L) — formula supplementation needed
Skin tone
- Darker skin absorbs less UV-B — especially in southeastern regions
Signs in children
Infants (<2 yrs): classical rickets
- Bowed legs (genu varum/valgum)
- Wrist, knee swelling
- Late tooth eruption
- Soft skull (craniotabes)
- Salt-and-pepper skull
- Delayed sitting/walking
- Irritability
Children + adolescents
- Bone pain (legs, back)
- Frequent infections (especially respiratory)
- Fatigue, weakness
- Muscle weakness
- Slowing height velocity (percentile drift)
- Stress fractures in child athletes
High-risk groups
- Exclusively breastfed infants <6 mo (without supplements)
- Darker skin tones
- Modest dress
- Obese children (vitamin stored in fat, less circulating)
- Celiac, IBD, cystic fibrosis (malabsorption)
- Anticonvulsant users (vitamin D metabolism accelerates)
- Vegan diets
- Living at northern latitudes (winter)
- Child athletes (higher need + indoor training)
Daily supplementation
Turkish Ministry of Health + AAP standards
| Age | Daily supplement (IU) |
|---|---|
| 0-12 mo | 400 IU |
| 1-3 yrs | 600 IU |
| 4-8 yrs | 600-1000 IU |
| 9-18 yrs | 1000 IU |
| 9-18 yrs (deficiency tx) | 2000 IU (12 weeks) |
Turkey provides free vitamin D drops for 0-12 mo through community health centers.
High-dose treatment (in deficiency)
By pediatrician prescription:
- 1-12 mo: 2000 IU/day, 6 weeks
- 1-12 yrs: 2000 IU/day, 6-12 weeks
- 12+ yrs: 4000 IU/day, 6-12 weeks
- Severe (<10 ng/mL): single dose 50,000-300,000 IU oral, then maintenance
Then retest 25-OH-D, target 30-50 ng/mL.
D2 vs D3 — which?
- D3 (cholecalciferol): animal source, more effective (1.5-2×), longer duration
- D2 (ergocalciferol): plant source, vegan-friendly, less effective
Pediatric recommendation: D3 as standard. D2 alternative for vegan families.
Can vitamin D be overdosed?
Yes, but rare. Toxicity typically requires >10,000 IU/day long-term. Hypervitaminosis D signs:
- Hypercalcemia → bone pain, kidney stones, frequent urination
- Anorexia, nausea, vomiting
- Weakness
- Severe: renal failure
Recommended upper limit: 4000 IU/day pediatric, never exceeded without physician supervision.
Who should be tested, and when?
Routine screening isn't recommended — but for high-risk groups:
- Annually (child athlete, dark skin, modest dress)
- Every 6 mo (treatment follow-up)
- Immediately on symptoms (bone pain, frequent infections, percentile drop)
FAQ
Does supplementing improve sport performance?
If deficiency exists, yes — performance, muscle strength, and recovery improve. In normal-level children, additional benefit is debated. RCT data is limited, but deficiency treatment is standard.
Don't I need supplementation in summer?
In ideal conditions (15-30 min sun, 20% skin exposure), summer endogenous synthesis is adequate. But most children don't meet these conditions — especially with screen-heavy holidays. Most pediatricians recommend year-round supplementation.
Multivitamin or standalone vitamin D?
Most multivitamins contain 400-600 IU — minimum sufficient for a child. For deficiency treatment, a standalone supplement is easier to dose.
My child is always sick — could it be vitamin D?
Vitamin-D-low children have 30% more respiratory infections. Test, treat if deficient. Not a panacea but a meaningful contribution.
Bottom line
Vitamin D is the silent architect of child growth — bone, immunity, muscle, even mood. In Turkey's geography, routine supplementation has become clinical standard. On suspicion of deficiency, 25-OH-D test + endocrinology advice are needed. For systematic growth tracking, sign up free and chart monthly measurements.