But the treatment involves a mega-dose of vitamin D -- 300,000 IUs -- which made one expert add a don't-try-this-at-home warning.
"This study does suggest (vitamin D) may have a role for menstrual cramps and menstrual pain, but I certainly would not recommend taking doses this high at the present time," said Dr. JoAnn Manson, who heads the division of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.
"The jury is still out," Manson told Reuters Health. "This is not a definitive trial by any means."
Menstrual cramping without underlying disease, or primary dysmenorrhea, is a common problem for reproductive-age women.
Although over-the-counter painkillers and oral contraceptives can help quell the pain, the drugs have side effects and so aren't an ideal option for long-term relief, Manson and a colleague write in a commentary on the new study in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
Vitamin D is known to decrease the production of inflammation-provoking molecules called cytokines, as well as hormone-like substances called prostaglandins -- which scientists believe to be a main cause of the distressing cramps.
Studies have suggested prostaglandins may also play a role in conditions like fibromyalgia and joint pain.
So researchers from Italy randomly assigned 40 women with painful periods to either swallow a dose of 300,000 IUs of vitamin D3, or down a shot of inactive liquid.
All of the women had relatively low vitamin D blood levels to begin with, although Manson said they were still higher than what is typically seen in the U.S. And the lower the levels, the more pain women said they experienced.
Two months later, women who had taken the vitamin rated their pain 2.3 points lower than initially on a scale from 0 to 10, and none of them took painkillers anymore.
By contrast, 40 percent of those women who had swallowed the inactive liquid still took the drugs and reported no reduction in pain, according to Dr. Antonino Lasco and colleagues from Universita di Messina.
Manson said it's unclear if women without vitamin D deficiency would also benefit, and the optimal treatment dose and duration remain murky.
And there may be side effects from mega-doses of the nutrient. For instance, an Australian study found that older women getting 500,000 IUs per year had an increased risk of falls and fractures.
Vitamin D is naturally made by the skin when exposed to sunlight and is also found in high amounts in fatty fish such as salmon and tuna.
The U.S. Institute of Medicine recommends that women aged 19 to 50 get 600 IUs of vitamin D a day, with upper tolerable levels of 4,000 IU daily. Higher doses may cause health problems and can damage the heart, blood vessels and kidneys by raising calcium levels in the blood.
A shot of 300,000 IUs every two months would land a woman at an average 5,000 IUs a day -- above the tolerable limit.
"I think it would be reasonable if a woman is having severe menstrual cramps to try a moderate dose and see if she gets relief, but stay below what the Institute of Medicine recommends as the higher level," said Manson.
Vitamin D3 supplements usually cost around $10 to $20 for a month's supply, and Manson said those who want to give it a try could take somewhere between 1,000 IUs and 2,000 IUs a day.
Some research has also suggested that vitamin D deficiencies could be involved in other ailments, such as cancer and autoimmune disorders. Manson and her colleagues are currently running a large trial to see if taking the vitamin -- with or without fish oil -- can help stave off cancer or heart disease in healthy men and women.
But she also warned that some studies had shown that when it comes to vitamins, more isn't always better. For instance, high doses of beta-carotene may up the risk of lung cancer, whereas too much vitamin E may lead to strokes and prostate cancer.
"We should consider the other mega-dose vitamin studies to be cautionary tales," Manson said. "It is import that the enthusiasm for vitamin D not outpace the evidence. We don't want everyone taking 300,000 IUs for preventing menstrual cramps."
SOURCE: bit.ly/7qXyI Archives of Internal Medicine, February 27, 2012.
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