Many models have failed to predict vitamin D levels based on about 10 variables.
The problems appear to be due to:
- Not enough variables in the model
- Not enough subjects
- Not powerful enough software/model
- Large variance between vitamin D testers ( 5% to 10%)
- Not record other health influences - emotional stress as a child, antibiotics as a child
Vitamin D Life is considering solving all of the above problems
- Might be able to predect vitamin D test results to be in one of the following ranges
0-20 15-25 20-30 25-35 30-50 40-60 50-70 60-80 70-100 80–100+
Goal of model: less than 5% chance of being in an adjacent category
Goal of model: 10X less chance (0.5%) of being off by 2 categories
Example: predicted 20-30 ng but was actually 30-50 ng - Vast majortiy of the data samples will be in the range of 10-30 ng
- Age range: 18 ==> 100 – majority in the range of 30-80
- Data for training and testing the model might be crowd-sourced via the web
People could fill in both the variables AND their vitamin D test results
Rarely can we expect that all of the variables will be filled in
Especially expect to lack the model of the tester
Variables/questions
Will need to quantize the details to train a model with the data
Might want to provide the user an indication of the importance of each question.
Age
Body
Weight, BMI, Muscular (compensates for BMI in-accuracy)
Skin color
Red hair (less likely to be out in the sun)
Have a disease/health problem which is strongly associated with low vitamin D
Trauma, Surgery
plasma exchange – reduces vitami D level by 50% in a single day
Inflammation – including depression -which consumes vitamin D
Have infection
Gut, Kidney, liver poor
Low stomach acid ==> less Magnesium
Fatty liver disease
Sore bones
No gall bladder
Poor sleep
Female
On the pill
Currently pregnant or lactating
Pregnancy during past 12 months
Twins during past 12 months
Excessive clothing for reliigious reasons
What is consumed
Vitamin D supplements : e.g. 400 IU, 4,000 IU (more than 3 months) D2 vs D3
Take Vitamin D3 supplements with evening meal or monsaturated fats
Magnesium supplements > 300 mg of Mg increases vitamin D levels about 30%, Mag in hard water
Probiotics
Low cholesterol diet
HFCS, pop
Omega-3
Vitamin A
Low cholesterol diet
Does not drink fortified milk
Smoking
Drugs increase/decrease response
statins
Environment/access to sun in the middle of the day
Urban/rural
Season
Latitude
Recent suncation
Outdoor worker
Work second shift
Work long hours
Altitude (30% more UV at the altitude of Colorado)
Shut-in
Air pollution – reduces UVB and likelihood that person will go outdoors
Use air conditioing (home, work, car)
Tanning bed use
Getting sunshine thru window > 3 hours a day for – UVA decreases vitamin D levels
Note: Vitamin D is not a constant Canadian vitamin D levels fell by 6% in 2 years (2009-2011)
 Download a Grassroots Health 2013 questionaire
 Download a Grassroots Health 2019 questionaire for Henry Lahore
Want some visibility as to the confidence of each prediction.
See also Vitamin D Life
- All items in category Predicting Vitamin D
63 items - Why do gardeners live longer (vitamin D, etc.)
- Reasons for low response to vitamin D
- How you might double your response to vitamin D
- Vitamin D deficiency predicted with 80 percent accuracy with just 11 parameters – June 2013
- How to predict response to a vitamin D dose – RCT April 2014
- AI: Exciting opportunity for Vitamin D Researchers
Toward predicting vitamin D levels without a blood test.4792 visitors, last modified 20 Mar, 2019, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)Top news814 Predict Vitamin D 63 Attached files
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