Research Shines Light On Lesser Known Form of Vitamin D in Foods
Now, new research finds that animal foods (eggs, some meats and dairy products) that contain vitamin D also have another lesser known form of this nutrient that hasn't been measured routinely in foods, says Janet Roseland, a nutritionist with the US Department of Agriculture's Nutrient Data Laboratory. She presented her findings at a symposium at the IFT2016 expo entitled ‘Where Science Feeds Innovation,’ hosted by the Institute of Food Technologists (IFT).
For years most nutrient laboratories measured only the vitamin D3 (the primary form) and vitamin D2 in foods and supplements, she says. But some foods also contain 25(OH)D, which has not typically been included as part of the total vitamin D given for foods, even though it may be two to five times more potent than D3 or D2.
Therefore, scientists at five technically-skilled laboratories in the United States and other countries used rigorous methods to analyze the content of several foods and a supplement to see if they could all obtain the same results.
"We found that the labs' values were consistent in measuring 25(OH)D and other forms, so in the future we can have better measures of vitamin D's total content in foods," Roseland says. The research was funded by the USDA's Agricultural Research Service and the National Institutes of Health's Office of Dietary Supplements.
Roseland believes that this additional information may one day be available in the USDA's National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference, which is considered an authoritative source of nutrient data for about 9,000 foods.
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