Journal article
Nutrients, 2022
Ph.D. Student & Research Assistant
APA
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Shoemaker, M. E., Salmon, O. F., Smith, C. M., Duarte-Gardea, M., & Cramer, J. (2022). Influences of Vitamin D and Iron Status on Skeletal Muscle Health: A Narrative Review. Nutrients.
Chicago/Turabian
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Shoemaker, Marni E., Owen F. Salmon, Cory M. Smith, M. Duarte-Gardea, and J. Cramer. “Influences of Vitamin D and Iron Status on Skeletal Muscle Health: A Narrative Review.” Nutrients (2022).
MLA
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Shoemaker, Marni E., et al. “Influences of Vitamin D and Iron Status on Skeletal Muscle Health: A Narrative Review.” Nutrients, 2022.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{marni2022a,
title = {Influences of Vitamin D and Iron Status on Skeletal Muscle Health: A Narrative Review},
year = {2022},
journal = {Nutrients},
author = {Shoemaker, Marni E. and Salmon, Owen F. and Smith, Cory M. and Duarte-Gardea, M. and Cramer, J.}
}
There is conflicting evidence of the roles vitamin D and iron have in isolation and combined in relation to muscle health. The purpose of this narrative review was to examine the current literature on the roles that vitamin D and iron have on skeletal muscle mass, strength, and function and how these nutrients are associated with skeletal muscle health in specific populations. Secondary purposes include exploring if low vitamin D and iron status are interrelated with skeletal muscle health and chronic inflammation and reviewing the influence of animal-source foods rich in these nutrients on health and performance. PubMed, Scopus, SPORT Discus, EMBAE, MEDLINE, and Google Scholar databases were searched to determine eligible studies. There was a positive effect of vitamin D on muscle mass, particularly in older adults. There was a positive effect of iron on aerobic and anaerobic performance. Studies reported mixed results for both vitamin D and iron on muscle strength and function. While vitamin D and iron deficiency commonly occur in combination, few studies examined effects on skeletal muscle health and inflammation. Isolated nutrients such as iron and vitamin D may have positive outcomes; however, nutrients within food sources may be most effective in improving skeletal muscle health.