Abstract

Ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation increases vitamin D level, but the influence of different UV sources (broadband and narrowband UVB lamps, solar simulators and sunbeds) and exposure durations have not been well characterized. In this study the influence of different UV sources on serum 25-hydroxyvitamin-D3 (25(OH)D3) levels in humans are reviewed. Serum 25(OH)D levels before and after UV exposure, and UV doses were extracted from 18 papers published in the past eight years. It was found that the UV dose–response curve for vitamin D generation in humans, as measured by the increments of serum 25(OH)D, is not linear with increasing UV doses and reaches a plateau at about 55nmol/L after 4–5weeks. About a half of this increase is equal to the difference between winter and summer 25(OH)D levels, and may be reached after 23 SEDs. The increments decrease with increasing baseline concentration of serum 25(OH)D, and the efficiency of only 0.7nmol/L per SED is expected on the average when initial concentrations are higher than 50–60nmol/L. A whole body exposure to 2 SEDs of UVB radiation 3times per week is expected to rise serum 25(OH)D with an initial rate of 3.9nmol/L per SED, bringing a winter level of serum 25(OH)D up to a summer level.

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