By Brant Cebulla, Vitamin D Council
It’s often stated that the human body can make 10,000 to 25,000 IU of vitamin D, maybe more, in a single session of full body sun exposure. How do we know that?
We measure your vitamin D stores by measuring 25(OH)D in your blood. When you input vitamin D, it gets sent to your liver to turn into 25(OH)D so the rest of your body can put it to use.
You can actually measure serum vitamin D in the blood before the liver has converted it to 25(OH)D. After a good day’s worth of UV exposure or large oral does of vitamin D, you’d expect serum levels to spike briefly, as the body needs some time to transport it to the liver.
Thus, we can start to compare how much serum vitamin D is in your blood immediately after sun exposure and how much serum vitamin D is in your blood immediately after you take a certain amount of supplement.
Before we take a look at the research, remember that we measure UVB doses in units of J/m². For skin type II (white skin, usually burns), a dose of 200 J/m² – equal to 15 to 30 minutes of solar noon sun exposure in the summer – will produce a slight pinkness to the skin.
UVB studies shows how much serum vitamin D was made when subjects were exposed to lamps:
Other studies focus on levels of serum vitamin D after supplementation:
When researchers gather all this data, they can start to reasonably estimate and project how much vitamin D you make from sun exposure based on the subsequent serum vitamin D levels. When we subject ourselves to full body sun exposure, enough to induce a slight pinkness, we probably make between 10,000 to 25,000 IU of vitamin D.
If we put this concept into a graph, it would look something like this:
Please note that this does not give justification to supplement daily with intakes in this range. If you got daily sun exposure over a long period of time, your skin would usually develop a tan, shielding the skin from much UVB and slowly decreasing the amount of vitamin D you could make per day. For this reason, it appears that oral intake of 5,000 IU/day is about equal to what your body is capable of making with year-round sun exposure, though every person’s requirements vary a little.
Sources
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