Vitamin D Helps Pelvic Floor Disorders
Women's Benefits Articles and Videos
- Vitamin D Deficiency Linked to Increased Muscle Fat, Decreased Strength
- Vitamin D In Pill Form May Cut Breast Cancer Risk
- Mammography or Primary Prevention...
- Effectiveness and Safety of Vitamin D in Relation to Bone Health.
- HealthWatch: Vitamin D And Weight Loss
- Link Between Successful Weight Loss And Vitamin D Levels
- D Is for Defense: Why Vitamin D Is the Ultimate Super Vitamin
- Does Vitamin D Protect Against High BP?
- PCOS And Vitamin D
- Does Vitamin D Deficiency Cause PCOS?
- 93 Percent of Women with Infertility are Deficient in Vitamin D
- Breast Cancer Survival and Recurrence Rates are Strongly Correlated with Vitamin D Deficiency
- Vitamin D Helps Pelvic Floor Disorders
- BBC News: “Vitamin D May Help Slow Ageing”
- Right diet 'could help stop PMS'
- Testing and Treatment Recommendations for Vitamin D
- Vitamin D Helps Insulin Resistance, Metabolic Syndrome and PCOS
- Treat Dark Circles with Vitamin D
Researchers at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse New York recently announced that pelvic floor disorders in women are associated with low vitamin D levels.
In a paper published in the April issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Dr. Samuel Badalian and Paula Rosenbaum studied 1,961 women and found 23% of American women over the age of 20 have a pelvic floor disorder, which often leads to urinary incontinence. Women who are overweight or who have had more than one child are at an increased risk.
The researcher found that low vitamin D levels predicted pelvic floor disorders, even in younger women and that urinary incontinence was twice as likely in vitamin D deficient women compared to women with higher vitamin D levels.
The authors concluded:
Our findings suggest that treatment of vitamin D insufficiency and deficiency in both premenopausal and postmenopausal women could improve pelvic muscle strength, with a possible reduction in the prevalence of pelvic floor disorders, including urinary incontinence.
Press contact information: Dr. Samuel Badalian, MD, 104 Union Ave., Suite # 803, Syracuse, NY, badalian@netzero.com
John Cannell, MD
Executive Director
The Vitamin D Council
1241 Johnson Ave., #134
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401