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Vitamin D3

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Specifically for Low Testosterone

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Why it works for Low Testosterone:

Biologic plausibility. Vitamin D receptors are present in the testes (Leydig and Sertoli cells). Experimental work suggests vitamin D signaling can influence steroidogenesis (the pathway that makes testosterone) via enzymes such as CYP11A1 and via calcium-dependent luteinizing hormone responses in Leydig cells. SpringerLink

Observational links. Multiple population studies find that men with lower 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] tend to have lower total testosterone; meta-analyses describe a modest positive association (association ≠ causation). SpringerLink

How to use for Low Testosterone:

Use vitamin D₃ to correct vitamin D deficiency, not as a direct testosterone drug. If you suspect low T, get properly evaluated; vitamin D is an adjunct for deficiency.

Check levels first (ideally). Measure serum 25(OH)D. Most authorities consider ≥50 nmol/L (≥20 ng/mL) sufficient for most people; deficiency risk rises below 30 nmol/L (12 ng/mL). Office of Dietary Supplements

If deficient, replete then maintain. Classic Endocrine Society guidance (2011) for adults with deficiency:

  • Repletion: 50,000 IU D₂/D₃ weekly for 8 weeks or 6,000 IU daily to achieve >75 nmol/L (>30 ng/mL).
  • Maintenance: 1,500–2,000 IU daily thereafter. (Clinicians may individualize.) Oxford Academic
  • Note: The 2024 Endocrine Society guideline focuses on prevention and generally discourages routine screening/supplementation in otherwise healthy adults, but it doesn’t replace the above treatment doses when true deficiency is diagnosed. Endocrine Society

Form & absorption. D₃ (cholecalciferol) is the common choice; both D₂ and D₃ are absorbed, and taking the dose with a meal containing fat improves absorption. Office of Dietary Supplements

Targets & recheck. After a repletion phase, re-measure 25(OH)D and adjust to keep within the lab’s reference range (often ≥20–30 ng/mL depending on the guideline used). Office of Dietary Supplements

Scientific Evidence for Low Testosterone:

Randomized trial showing an increase (2011). Overweight men with low baseline testosterone who took 3,332 IU D₃ daily for 1 year had significant rises in total and free testosterone vs placebo. This is the often-cited positive RCT. Thieme

Randomized trial showing no effect (2017). The Graz Vitamin D & Total Testosterone RCT in healthy middle-aged men found no change in testosterone after vitamin D supplementation vs placebo. Oxford Academic

Systematic reviews/meta-analyses. Evidence is mixed: some meta-analyses suggest vitamin D supplementation may slightly increase total testosterone, but overall effects are small and inconsistent, and results vary by baseline vitamin D status, dose, and population. Europe PMC

Specific Warnings for Low Testosterone:

Do not exceed safe intakes without medical supervision. The tolerable upper intake level (UL) for adults is 4,000 IU/day. Toxicity usually occurs with chronic intakes ≥10,000 IU/day and presents with hypercalcemia (nausea, vomiting, weakness, confusion, polyuria, kidney injury). Office of Dietary Supplements

Medication interactions.

Thiazide diuretics: raise hypercalcemia risk when combined with vitamin D.

Glucocorticoids: can reduce vitamin D activation/absorption.

Orlistat and bile-acid sequestrants (e.g., cholestyramine): reduce vitamin D absorption.

• Some statins may have altered metabolism with high-dose vitamin D. Discuss with your prescriber. Office of Dietary Supplements

Conditions needing caution. Granulomatous diseases (e.g., sarcoidosis), certain lymphomas, and severe kidney disease can predispose to hypercalcemia with vitamin D—use only with clinician guidance. Office of Dietary Supplements

2024 guidance context. For generally healthy adults (no clear indication), routine screening or supplementation isn’t recommended; focus on diet/sunlight and individualized care. Treat documented deficiency. Endocrine Society

General Information (All Ailments)

Note: You are viewing ailment-specific information above. This section shows the general remedy information for all conditions.

What It Is

Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) is a fat-soluble vitamin that the human body can make on its own when UV-B sunlight hits the skin. It can also be consumed in food (e.g., egg yolks, oily fish, fortified milk) or taken as a supplement. After entering the body, D3 is converted in the liver to calcidiol (25-hydroxyvitamin D), and then in the kidneys to calcitriol — the hormonally active form of vitamin D. These conversions are tightly regulated because vitamin D behaves less like a “vitamin” and more like a hormone with genomic effects.

How It Works

The active form of vitamin D (calcitriol) binds to the vitamin D receptor (VDR), a nuclear receptor present in many cell types. Once bound, the vitamin D–VDR complex regulates the transcription of genes involved in calcium absorption, bone remodeling, immune signaling, and cellular differentiation. One of its clearest roles is to raise blood calcium by increasing absorption from the gut, reducing loss in the kidneys, and mobilizing calcium from bone when needed. Beyond mineral metabolism, vitamin D also modulates innate and adaptive immunity, reduces inflammatory signaling, and influences the differentiation of many tissues — which is why deficiency affects systems far beyond bones.

Why It’s Important

Vitamin D is essential for maintaining mineral balance and skeletal integrity; deficiency can lead to osteomalacia in adults and rickets in children, and even subclinical deficiency increases the rate of fractures and bone loss. Its immunomodulatory actions appear to reduce the incidence or severity of some infections, especially respiratory ones in deficient individuals. Observationally, low vitamin D status has been associated with higher rates of autoimmune disease, cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, some cancers, depression, and all-cause mortality — though association does not prove that supplementation prevents those outcomes. Nevertheless, population-level insufficiency is common due to indoor lifestyles, sunscreen use, higher latitudes, winter seasons, darker skin pigmentation (which reduces cutaneous synthesis), aging skin, and obesity (which sequesters fat-soluble vitamins in adipose tissue).

Considerations

Vitamin D is fat-soluble, so excess can accumulate and cause toxicity (hypercalcemia, kidney stones, vascular calcification), though this is usually from chronic high-dose supplementation, not sunlight or diet. Personal need varies by latitude, season, skin tone, age, body fat, and kidney/liver function, so a single fixed dose is not universally appropriate. Measuring serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D is the standard way to assess status; targets differ by guideline, but values persistently below ~20 ng/mL are generally considered deficient, whereas most toxicity reports involve sustained levels above ~100 ng/mL. Because vitamin D raises calcium absorption, adequate vitamin K2 and magnesium status may help maintain safer calcium handling, while thiazide use, sarcoidosis, and certain granulomatous diseases can increase sensitivity to vitamin D. In pregnancy and lactation, requirements rise, but dosing should still be individualized rather than assumed.

Helps with these conditions

Vitamin D3 is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

Common Cold 0% effective
Flu 0% effective
COVID-19 0% effective
Depression 0% effective
Eczema 0% effective
Menopause 0% effective
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Total Votes
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Studies
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Avg. Effectiveness

Detailed Information by Condition

Common Cold

0% effective

Immune regulation & antimicrobial peptides. Vitamin D (the active form 1,25-diOH-D) binds the Vitamin D Receptor in immune cells and epithelial ce...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 8 studies cited

Flu

0% effective

Vitamin D3 appears effective against influenza through multiple immune mechanisms. Studies show it enhances innate immunity by up-regulating antimicro...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 6 studies cited

COVID-19

0% effective

Vitamin D3 was investigated for COVID-19 because it plays important roles in both innate and adaptive immunity, with potential immunomodulatory and an...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 3 studies cited

Depression

0% effective

Vitamin D acts like a neurosteroid. It affects brain cells directly (vitamin D receptors and enzymes exist in neurons/glia), influences serotonin synt...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 5 studies cited

Eczema

0% effective

Immune modulation & antimicrobial defense. Vitamin D up-regulates antimicrobial peptides (especially cathelicidin/LL-37), which are often low in a...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 8 studies cited

Menopause

0% effective

Bone health after menopause: Falling estrogen accelerates bone loss and fracture risk. Vitamin D3 increases intestinal calcium absorption, helps maint...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 8 studies cited

Osteoporosis

0% effective

Improves calcium absorption in the gut and supports correct bone mineralization. Low vitamin D drives secondary hyperparathyroidism (↑PTH), accelerati...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 7 studies cited

Tooth Decay

0% effective

Mineral balance for remineralisation. Vitamin D increases intestinal absorption of calcium and phosphate, maintaining serum levels that support enamel...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 3 studies cited

Psoriasis

0% effective

Normalizes keratinocyte growth & differentiation. Psoriatic plaques feature over-proliferating, poorly differentiated keratinocytes. Vitamin-D sig...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 6 studies cited

Immune modulation: Vitamin D receptors are present on many immune cells. Active vitamin D can tilt responses away from inflammatory Th17 cells and sup...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 6 studies cited

Lupus

0% effective

Deficiency is common in SLE. Photosensitivity and sun avoidance increase risk; deficiency is repeatedly reported in SLE cohorts. Cambridge University...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 5 studies cited

Low Testosterone

0% effective

Biologic plausibility. Vitamin D receptors are present in the testes (Leydig and Sertoli cells). Experimental work suggests vitamin D signaling can in...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 3 studies cited

Immunomodulation. Active vitamin D (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D) binds the vitamin D receptor (VDR) on immune cells and tends to:tilt T cells away from pr...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 5 studies cited

Celiac Disease

0% effective

Vitamin D₃ (cholecalciferol) is not a cure for celiac disease (CD). What it is useful for in people with CD is (1) correcting very common vitamin-D de...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 13 studies cited

Low winter sunlight → lower vitamin D → possible mood effects. The body makes vitamin D in skin after UVB exposure. In winter (shorter daylight, cover...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 5 studies cited

Gastroparesis

0% effective

Vitamin D supplementation may help with gastroparesis through immunomodulation and decreasing inflammation surrounding motor neurons, while also incre...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 4 studies cited

Colorectal Cancer

0% effective

Biology: The active vitamin D hormone (calcitriol) binds the vitamin D receptor (VDR) in colon cells and can:Antagonise Wnt/β-catenin signalling (a ke...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

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