- What is vitamin D?
- A fat-soluble vitamin made in the skin when exposed to sunlight.
- Important for bone health, calcium balance, and immune function.
- Also thought to have effects on the cardiovascular system because vitamin D receptors are found in blood vessels, heart muscle, and immune cells.
- Why the interest in heart health?
- Low vitamin D levels have been linked in observational studies to:
- High blood pressure
- Diabetes and metabolic syndrome
- Coronary artery disease
- Heart failure
- Increased risk of death
- These associations raised hopes that supplementing vitamin D might protect the heart.
- What the big trials show
- Large randomised trials (like VITAL and others) have tested vitamin D supplements in tens of thousands of people.
- The results: no clear reduction in heart attacks, strokes, or major cardiovascular events from vitamin D supplements in the general population.
- In other words, low vitamin D is probably a marker of poor health rather than a direct cause of heart disease.
- Where it might still matter
- Heart failure: some smaller studies suggest vitamin D supplementation may improve heart muscle function and reduce inflammation in people with deficiency, though the evidence is not yet conclusive.
- Hypertension: vitamin D deficiency is associated with higher blood pressure, but supplements have shown only modest or inconsistent effects.
- Deficiency states: correcting severe deficiency (<25 nmol/L or 10 ng/mL) is important for general health and may indirectly benefit the heart.
- Safety
- Normal supplementation (e.g. 800–2000 IU daily) is generally safe.
- Very high doses can cause calcium overload, kidney stones, and vascular calcification — which may harm the heart.
💡 Summary for patients:
Vitamin D deficiency is linked with a higher risk of heart problems, but large studies show that taking vitamin D supplements doesn’t prevent heart attacks or strokes in most people. The real benefit of vitamin D is for bone and muscle health. If you’re severely deficient, correcting that may help your overall health — and possibly your heart indirectly — but vitamin D does not thus far appear to be a magic pill for the heart.
Here is a video I have done on this subject:
My vitamin D was 8.3. I am supplementing with D3. What do you think about taking K2 with the D3? I also am taking a 100mg magnesium glycinate with it.