Research Grant
[Cite as http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/216711]Researchers: Dr Ruth Morley (Principal investigator) , Prof John Carlin , Prof John Wark
Brief description Vitamin D is a potent steroid hormone required for bone growth and mineralisation, and there is evidence that it regulates cell proliferation. Insufficiency in pregnant women is a cause for concern. The role of vitamin D in human fetal development has been little investigated. At the severe end of the maternal vitamin D insufficiency spectrum, a very small number of deficient neonates have congenital rickets. Low maternal vitamin D status has also been associated with neonatal hypocalcaemia and defective tooth enamel. Randomised trials have shown that giving vitamin D to deficient women significantly improves their offspring's birth size and length at a year of age, in one study even though all infants were given vitamin D supplements post-natally. We do not understand the nature of the relationship between maternal vitamin D status and offspring growth. There could be a continuous association, or a threshold vitamin D level below which offspring growth is impaired. If the latter is the case, that threshold value needs to be known. Furthermore, we do not know whether maternal vitamin D level in early or late gestation is most influential in terms of fetal and infant growth. Raised maternal parathyroid hormone (PTH) level is a marker of disturbed vitamin D metabolism. There is evidence that offspring are shorter with increasing level of maternal PTH. In a study in Geelong, 63% of 20-45 year old women tested in winter, and 32% tested in summer, had vitamin D levels in the range where PTH rises. Thus a significant proportion of women may have insufficient vitamin D, in early or late pregnancy, to sustain optimal fetal growth. These issues are important for the health of mothers and their offspring, and there are public health implications, in terms of maternal health and possibly later health of the offspring. These issues have not been investigated in Australia or elsewhere, and this is a novel and important study.
Funding Amount $AUD 168,550.00
Funding Scheme NHMRC Project Grants
Notes Standard Project Grant
- PURL : http://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/216711
- nhmrc : 216711