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Prenatal supplementation with 400 to 600 IU vitamin D is currently recommended — but is high-dose maternal supplementation even better for skeletal and anthropometric outcomes? Researchers performed a secondary analysis of data from a randomized trial in Denmark involving 623 women and their offspring (584 children) to examine the effects of maternal receipt of 2400 IU vitamin D3 in addition to standard supplementation (400 IU) versus placebo (standard supplementation alone) from 24 weeks' gestation to 1 week postpartum. The children's growth parameters and skeletal measures were evaluated with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry at ages 3 and 6 years.
At 6 years, children whose mothers received sevenfold higher vitamin D supplementation had gr…