Vitamin D Deficiency
What is Vitamin D Deficiency?
Vitamin D deficiency happens when your body does not have enough vitamin D to function properly. This nutrient acts more like a hormone than a traditional vitamin. It helps your body absorb calcium, supports your immune system, and plays a role in muscle and nerve function.
Your body makes vitamin D when your skin is exposed to sunlight. You can also get it from certain foods like fatty fish, egg yolks, and fortified dairy products. Despite these sources, vitamin D deficiency affects nearly 1 billion people worldwide. Many people do not realize they are deficient because symptoms can be subtle or take years to appear.
When vitamin D levels drop too low, your body struggles to absorb calcium from food. This triggers a cascade of effects that weaken your bones, compromise your immune defenses, and can leave you feeling tired and achy. The good news is that deficiency is easy to detect with a simple blood test and straightforward to treat.
Symptoms
- Fatigue and low energy that does not improve with rest
- Bone pain or aches, especially in the back, hips, or legs
- Muscle weakness or cramps
- Frequent infections or slow wound healing
- Mood changes including depression or anxiety
- Hair loss or thinning hair
- Bone fractures from minor falls or injuries
Many people with vitamin D deficiency have no obvious symptoms at first. The condition can develop slowly over months or years. By the time symptoms appear, your levels may be very low and already affecting your bone density.
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Causes and risk factors
The most common cause of vitamin D deficiency is limited sun exposure. People who spend most of their time indoors, live in northern climates, or have darker skin need more sun exposure to produce adequate vitamin D. Wearing sunscreen, while important for skin cancer prevention, also reduces vitamin D production. Older adults produce less vitamin D from sunlight as skin ages, and people with obesity may need higher amounts because vitamin D gets stored in fat tissue.
Dietary factors also play a role since few foods naturally contain vitamin D. Medical conditions that affect fat absorption, such as Crohn's disease, celiac disease, or liver disease, can prevent your body from absorbing vitamin D properly. Kidney disease reduces your ability to convert vitamin D into its active form. Certain medications including steroids, weight loss drugs, and seizure medications can interfere with vitamin D metabolism.
How it's diagnosed
Vitamin D deficiency is diagnosed through blood testing. The key test measures 25-hydroxy vitamin D, which reflects your total vitamin D status from both sun exposure and diet. Levels below 20 nanograms per milliliter indicate deficiency, while levels between 20 and 30 are considered insufficient. Your doctor may also check calcium levels and parathyroid hormone to see if low vitamin D has triggered your body to pull calcium from your bones.
Rite Aid offers vitamin D testing as part of our core health panel, along with calcium, alkaline phosphatase, and parathyroid hormone measurements. These tests work together to give you a clear picture of your bone health and vitamin D status. Testing twice per year helps you track whether lifestyle changes or supplements are bringing your levels into the healthy range.
Treatment options
- Vitamin D supplements, typically 1000 to 2000 IU daily for maintenance or higher doses to correct deficiency
- Safe sun exposure of 10 to 30 minutes several times per week, depending on skin tone and location
- Eating vitamin D rich foods including salmon, mackerel, sardines, egg yolks, and fortified milk or cereals
- Calcium supplements if dietary calcium intake is low, since vitamin D needs calcium to protect bones
- Treating underlying conditions that interfere with vitamin D absorption or metabolism
- Regular blood testing to monitor levels and adjust supplementation
- Working with a doctor or nutritionist to create a personalized plan based on your test results
Concerned about Vitamin D Deficiency? Get tested at Rite Aid.
- Simple blood draw at your nearest lab
- Results in days, not weeks
- Share results with your doctor
Frequently asked questions
The first signs often include persistent fatigue, muscle weakness, and mood changes like feeling down or irritable. Many people also experience bone pain or aches, especially in the lower back or legs. These symptoms can be vague and easy to dismiss, which is why blood testing is the most reliable way to identify deficiency early.
Mild deficiency can improve within 6 to 8 weeks with daily supplementation. Severe deficiency may take 3 to 6 months to correct, especially if levels are very low. Your doctor may prescribe higher doses initially, then switch to a maintenance dose once levels normalize. Regular blood tests help track your progress.
Getting enough vitamin D from food alone is very difficult since few foods contain significant amounts. You would need to eat multiple servings of fatty fish every day to meet your needs. Most people require a combination of sun exposure, vitamin D rich foods, and supplements to maintain healthy levels year round.
Most experts consider levels above 30 nanograms per milliliter to be sufficient for bone health and overall wellness. Levels between 20 and 30 are insufficient, while anything below 20 is deficient. Some functional medicine practitioners aim for levels between 40 and 60 for better immune function and disease prevention.
The relationship between vitamin D and weight is complex and not fully understood. Low vitamin D levels are more common in people with obesity, partly because vitamin D gets stored in fat tissue. Some research suggests deficiency may affect metabolism and appetite regulation, but more studies are needed to confirm a direct cause and effect.
Most people need 10 to 30 minutes of midday sun exposure on arms and legs several times per week. The exact amount depends on your skin tone, location, season, and time of day. People with darker skin need more sun exposure to produce the same amount of vitamin D as those with lighter skin.
Yes, research links low vitamin D levels to depression, anxiety, and seasonal mood changes. Vitamin D receptors exist throughout the brain, and the nutrient plays a role in neurotransmitter production. While supplementation may help improve mood in deficient individuals, it should not replace mental health treatment when needed.
Steroids like prednisone, weight loss medications that block fat absorption, and some seizure medications can lower vitamin D levels. Cholesterol lowering drugs and laxatives may also interfere with absorption. If you take any of these medications regularly, talk to your doctor about monitoring your vitamin D status and possibly taking supplements.
Yes, taking extremely high doses of vitamin D supplements over time can lead to toxicity, though this is rare. Symptoms include nausea, weakness, and dangerously high calcium levels that can damage the kidneys. Toxicity typically only occurs with doses above 10,000 IU daily for months. Regular blood testing helps ensure your levels stay in the safe and effective range.
Vitamin D3 is generally considered more effective at raising and maintaining blood levels of vitamin D. Your body produces D3 naturally when exposed to sunlight, and it stays active in your system longer than D2. Most experts recommend D3 supplements unless you follow a strict vegan diet, in which case D2 from plant sources may be your only option.