Unit Converter
Vitamin D total

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(25-OH Vitamin D - Gold Standard Marker of Vitamin D Status)

Synonyms

  • 25-hydroxyvitamin D
  • 25-OH D
  • Calcidiol
  • Vitamin D (total)
  • 25(OH)D₂ + 25(OH)D₃
  • Total Vitamin D
  • Calcitriol precursor

Units of Measurement

  • nmol/L
  • ng/mL
  • ng/dL
  • ng/100 mL
  • ng%
  • ng/L
  • µg/L

Unit Conversions

Molecular weight of 25-hydroxyvitamin D ≈ 400.65 g/mol

nmol/L ↔ ng/mL

1 ng/mL=2.5 nmol/L1\ \text{ng/mL} = 2.5\ \text{nmol/L}1 ng/mL=2.5 nmol/L 1 nmol/L=0.4 ng/mL1\ \text{nmol/L} = 0.4\ \text{ng/mL}1 nmol/L=0.4 ng/mL

ng/dL → ng/mL

1 ng/dL=0.01 ng/mL1\ \text{ng/dL} = 0.01\ \text{ng/mL}1 ng/dL=0.01 ng/mL

ng/mL → ng/L

1 ng/mL=1000 ng/L=1 µg/L1\ \text{ng/mL} = 1000\ \text{ng/L} = 1\ \text{µg/L}1 ng/mL=1000 ng/L=1 µg/L

ng/100 mL = ng% = ng/dL

Description

25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OH D) is the primary circulating form and the best indicator of overall vitamin D stores.

It reflects:

  • Cutaneous synthesis (UVB)
  • Dietary intake
  • Supplementation

Total Vitamin D = 25-OH D₂ + 25-OH D₃

It is hydroxylated in:

  • Liver → 25-OH D (calcidiol)
  • Kidney → 1,25-OH₂ D (calcitriol: active form)

25-OH D has a long half-life (2–3 weeks), making it ideal for screening.

Physiological Role

1. Calcium / Phosphate Homeostasis

  • Enhances intestinal calcium absorption
  • Improves phosphate absorption
  • Regulates PTH levels

2. Bone Health

Essential for:

  • Prevention of rickets
  • Prevention of osteomalacia
  • Bone remodeling

3. Immune Function

Vitamin D modulates innate and adaptive immunity.

4. Endocrine / Metabolic Functions

Low vitamin D links with:

  • Insulin resistance
  • Autoimmune disease
  • Muscle weakness

Clinical Significance

VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY

Symptoms

  • Bone pain
  • Muscle weakness / myopathy
  • Fatigue
  • Increased falls in elderly
  • Osteomalacia (adults)
  • Rickets (children)

Causes

  • Low sunlight exposure
  • Dark skin
  • Obesity
  • Malabsorption (celiac, Crohn’s, post-bariatric surgery)
  • Liver disease
  • Kidney disease
  • Anticonvulsants, rifampicin, steroids

EXCESS VITAMIN D

Usually due to mega-dose supplements, not sunlight.

Symptoms

  • Hypercalcemia
  • Nausea, vomiting
  • Polyuria, dehydration
  • Kidney stones
  • Arrhythmias

Reference Intervals

(Endocrine Society + Tietz 8E + Mayo + ARUP)

Serum 25-OH Vitamin D

Levelng/mLnmol/L
Severe deficiency<10<25
Deficiency<20<50
Insufficiency20–3050–75
Sufficiency (adequate)30–10075–250
Potential toxicity>150>375

Diagnostic Uses

1. Evaluation of Vitamin D Deficiency

Most common indication.

2. Bone Metabolic Disorders

  • Osteoporosis
  • Osteomalacia
  • Rickets

3. Chronic Kidney Disease

25-OH D used before calcitriol replacement.

4. Hyperparathyroidism

Low vitamin D causes secondary hyperparathyroidism.

5. Malabsorption Syndromes

Celiac, pancreatitis, bariatric surgery.

6. High-Risk Pregnancy

Vitamin D deficiency is common in pregnancy.

Analytical Notes

  • LC-MS/MS is the gold standard.
  • Immunoassays may underestimate in deficiency or overestimate with supplements.
  • Fasting not required but recommended for consistency.
  • Avoid light exposure (25-OH D is stable but precautions preferred).

Clinical Pearls

  • Obesity reduces circulating vitamin D (fat sequestration).
  • CKD patients require both 25-OH D and 1,25-OH₂ D evaluation.
  • Vitamin D₃ supplements raise levels more effectively than Vitamin D₂.
  • Daily dosing is safer than large bolus doses.
  • Low vitamin D commonly coexists with hypomagnesemia, reducing response to therapy.

Interesting Fact

Vitamin D is the only vitamin that acts as a pro-hormone, with its active form functioning like a steroid hormone regulating gene transcription.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Vitamin D
  2. Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline - Vitamin D, 2024 update
  3. Institute of Medicine (IOM/NAM) Vitamin D Requirements
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - 25-OH Vitamin D
  5. ARUP Consult - Vitamin D Testing
  6. NIH Office of Dietary Supplements - Vitamin D

Last updated: January 27, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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