1.Research advances in the role of vitamin D in autism spectrum disorders.
Ling SHAN ; Xiao-Lan HU ; Bing WANG ; Fei-Yong JIA
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2016;18(2):183-188
The etiology and pathogenic mechanism of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are still unclear. The relationship between vitamin D and ASD has drawn attention in recent years due to common vitamin D deficiency in children with ASD. This article reviews the peripheral blood levels of vitamin D in children with ASD, the possible reasons for hypovitamin D and its possible roles in the etiology of ASD and the efficacy of vitamin D supplementation in ASD.
Animals
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Autism Spectrum Disorder
;
blood
;
drug therapy
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Humans
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Vitamin D
;
administration & dosage
;
blood
;
Vitamin D Deficiency
;
blood
;
drug therapy
2.Role of vitamin D in pediatric irritable bowel syndrome.
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2021;23(3):310-314
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common functional gastrointestinal disease in children and has the clinical manifestations of recurrent abdominal pain with the changes in defecation frequency or stool form. Many studies have shown that children with IBS have a significantly lower vitamin D level than the healthy population, and vitamin D supplementation can significantly improve the clinical symptoms and quality of life of the children, suggesting that vitamin D supplementation may play a role in the treatment of IBS. This article reviews the association between vitamin D and IBS in children and elaborates on the possible mechanism of action of vitamin D.
Abdominal Pain
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Child
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Diarrhea
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Humans
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Irritable Bowel Syndrome/drug therapy*
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Quality of Life
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Vitamin D
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Vitamin D Deficiency
4.Advances in research on the relationship between vitamin D and sleep.
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2014;52(4):263-266
Brain
;
physiology
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Child
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Dyssomnias
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drug therapy
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epidemiology
;
etiology
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Humans
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Infant
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Sleep
;
drug effects
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Vitamin D
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administration & dosage
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analogs & derivatives
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blood
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Vitamin D Deficiency
;
complications
;
drug therapy
;
epidemiology
5.Association between Changes in Serum 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Levels and Survival in Patients with Breast Cancer Receiving Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy.
Ji Su KIM ; Caspar Christian HAULE ; Joo Heung KIM ; Sung Mook LIM ; Kwang Hyun YOON ; Jee Ye KIM ; Hyung Seok PARK ; Seho PARK ; Seung Il KIM ; Young Up CHO ; Byeong Woo PARK
Journal of Breast Cancer 2018;21(2):134-141
PURPOSE: We investigated the changes in serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) levels before and after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NCT) and the associations with pathologic complete response (pCR) and survival in patients with breast cancer. METHODS: Serum 25(OH)D concentrations were measured pre- and post-NCT in 374 patients between 2010 and 2013. Based on a cutoff of 20 ng/mL, patients were categorized into “either sufficient” or “both deficient” groups. The associations with clinicopathological data, including pCR and survival, were analyzed using multivariable analyses. RESULTS: Patients with either pre- or post-NCT sufficient 25(OH)D levels accounted for 23.8%, and the overall pCR rate was 25.9%. Most patients showed 25(OH)D deficiency at diagnosis and 65.8% showed decreased serum levels after NCT. Changes in 25(OH)D status were associated with postmenopause status, rural residence, baseline summer examination, and molecular phenotype, but not pCR. No association between survival and 25(OH)D status was found, including in the subgroup analyses based on molecular phenotypes. CONCLUSION: Most Korean patients with breast cancer showed vitamin D deficiency at diagnosis and a significant decrease in the serum concentration after NCT. No association with oncologic outcomes was found. Therefore, although optimal management for vitamin D deficiency is urgent for skeletal health, further research is warranted to clearly determine the prognostic role of vitamin D in patients with breast cancer who are candidates for NCT.
Breast Neoplasms*
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Breast*
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Diagnosis
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Drug Therapy*
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Humans
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Neoadjuvant Therapy
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Phenotype
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Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Postmenopause
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Treatment Outcome
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Vitamin D
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Vitamin D Deficiency
6.Effect of Antiepileptic Drugs on Bone Mineral Density and Bone Metabolism in Epileptic Patients.
Sang Won PARK ; Yong Won CHO ; Jae Hun HER ; Yong Euk SHIN ; Hyun Ah YI ; Jun LEE ; Hyung LEE ; Jeong Geun LIM ; Sang Doe YI
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2004;22(4):310-314
BACKGROUND: Bone mineral density (BMD) is influenced by genetic, hormonal, and environmental factors. Long-term antiepileptic drug (AED) use also causes osteopenia or osteoporosis that have been most extensively described in institutionalized patients. But, the mechanism of these abnormalities is unclear. The objective of this study is to determine the effect of AED on bone density and to explain the pathophysiologic mechanisms by analyzing bone related factors. METHODS: We prospectively examined BMD by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry in 45 patients with epilepsy. We measured the serum calcium, phosphorus, protein, alkaline phosphatase (ALP), bone specific ALP, vitamin D and osteocalcin to analyze the factors that influence bone metabolism. RESULTS: BMD was significantly lower in the patient group than in the control group (p<0.05). 13% of patients had osteopenia and 3% of patients had osteoporosis. The level of bone specific ALP was higher in the patient group, but the level of vitamin D was not different, implying that BMD is decreased by the direct effect of antiepileptic drugs. There was a weak negative correlation and marginal significance between BMD and the duration of therapy in the patient group (r=-0.407, p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term antiepileptic drug therapy in patients who have seizures causes significant bone loss in the lumbar spine even in the absence of vitamin D deficiency. In addition, the degree of bone mineral density was weakly related with the therapeutic duration of antiepileptic drugs. The regular evaluation of BMD in patients with long-term antiepileptic drugs might be helpful to prevent decreases in BMD.
Absorptiometry, Photon
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Alkaline Phosphatase
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Anticonvulsants*
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Bone Density*
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Bone Diseases, Metabolic
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Calcium
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Drug Therapy
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Epilepsy
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Humans
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Metabolism*
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Osteocalcin
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Osteoporosis
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Phosphorus
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Prospective Studies
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Seizures
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Spine
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Vitamin D
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Vitamin D Deficiency
7.Efficacy and Safety of Weekly Alendronate Plus Vitamin D3 5600 IU versus Weekly Alendronate Alone in Korean Osteoporotic Women: 16-Week Randomized Trial.
Kwang Joon KIM ; Yong Ki MIN ; Jung Min KOH ; Yoon Sok CHUNG ; Kyoung Min KIM ; Dong Won BYUN ; In Joo KIM ; Mikyung KIM ; Sung Soo KIM ; Kyung Wan MIN ; Ki Ok HAN ; Hyoung Moo PARK ; Chan Soo SHIN ; Sung Hee CHOI ; Jong Suk PARK ; Dong Jin CHUNG ; Ji Oh MOK ; Hong Sun BAEK ; Seong Hwan MOON ; Yong Soo KIM ; Sung Kil LIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 2014;55(3):715-724
Vitamin D (vit-D) is essential for bone health, although many osteoporosis patients have low levels of 25-hydroxy-vit-D [25(OH)D]. This randomized, open-label study compared the effects of once weekly alendronate 70 mg containing 5600 IU vit-D3 (ALN/D5600) to alendronate 70 mg without additional vit-D (ALN) on the percent of patients with vit-D insufficiency [25(OH)D <15 ng/mL, primary endpoint] and serum parathyroid hormone (PTH, secondary endpoint) levels in postmenopausal, osteoporotic Korean women. Neuromuscular function was also measured. A total of 268 subjects were randomized. Overall, 35% of patients had vit-D insufficiency at baseline. After 16-weeks, there were fewer patients with vit-D insufficiency in the ALN/D5600 group (1.47%) than in the ALN group (41.67%) (p<0.001). Patients receiving ALN/D5600 compared with ALN were at a significantly decreased risk of vit-D insufficiency [odds ratio=0.02, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.00-0.08]. In the ALN/D5600 group, significant increases in serum 25(OH)D were observed at weeks 8 (9.60 ng/mL) and 16 (11.41 ng/mL), where as a significant decrease was recorded in the ALN group at week 16 (-1.61 ng/mL). By multiple regression analysis, major determinants of increases in serum 25(OH)D were ALN/D5600 administration, seasonal variation, and baseline 25(OH)D. The least squares mean percent change from baseline in serum PTH in the ALN/D5600 group (8.17%) was lower than that in the ALN group (29.98%) (p=0.0091). There was no significant difference between treatment groups in neuromuscular function. Overall safety was similar between groups. In conclusion, the administration of 5600 IU vit-D in the ALN/D5600 group improved vit-D status and reduced the magnitude of PTH increase without significant side-effects after 16 weeks in Korean osteoporotic patients.
Adult
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Aged
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Alendronate/adverse effects/*therapeutic use
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Cholecalciferol/adverse effects/deficiency/*therapeutic use
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Female
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Humans
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Middle Aged
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Osteoporosis, Postmenopausal/*drug therapy
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Vitamin D Deficiency/*drug therapy
8.Vitamin D and chronic kidney disease.
The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine 2014;29(4):416-427
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) has been recognized as a significant global health problem because of the increased risk of total and cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Vitamin D deficiency or insufficiency is common in patients with CKD, and serum levels of vitamin D appear to have an inverse correlation with kidney function. Growing evidence has indicated that vitamin D deficiency may contribute to deteriorating renal function, as well as increased morbidity and mortality in patients with CKD. Recent studies have suggested that treatment with active vitamin D or its analogues can ameliorate renal injury by reducing fibrosis, apoptosis, and inflammation in animal models; this treatment also decreases proteinuria and mortality in patients with CKD. These renoprotective effects of vitamin D treatment are far beyond its classical role in the maintenance of bone and mineral metabolism, in addition to its pleiotropic effects on extra-mineral metabolism. In this review, we discuss the altered metabolism of vitamin D in kidney disease, and the potential renoprotective mechanisms of vitamin D in experimental and clinical studies. In addition, issues regarding the effects of vitamin D treatment on clinical outcomes are discussed.
Animals
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Biological Markers/blood
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Dietary Supplements
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Humans
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Kidney/drug effects/*metabolism
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Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/*blood/diagnosis/drug therapy/epidemiology
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Risk Factors
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Treatment Outcome
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Vitamin D/*blood/therapeutic use
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Vitamin D Deficiency/*blood/diagnosis/drug therapy/epidemiology
9.Vitamin D requirement in pregnancy to prevent deficiency in neonates: a randomised trial.
Mehrdad SHAKIBA ; Mohamad Reza IRANMANESH
Singapore medical journal 2013;54(5):285-288
INTRODUCTIONThe exact amount of vitamin D required for pregnant women to adequately supply the foetus during pregnancy is still unclear. This randomised trial attempted to determine the optimal dose of vitamin D necessary during pregnancy in order to attain a vitamin D level > 20 ng/mL in neonates.
METHODSA total of 51 healthy, pregnant women in Yazd, Iran, were recruited in 2009. Of these, 34 were randomised to receive either 50,000 IU (Group A) or 100,000 IU (Group B) of vitamin D3 per month from the second trimester of pregnancy. The remaining 17 pregnant women, who formed the third group (Group C) and were found to have vitamin D deficiency, were initially treated with 200,000 IU of vitamin D3, following which the dose was adjusted to 50,000 IU per month. 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) in cord blood was measured by chemiluminescence immunoassay, and a serum 25(OH)D level < 20 ng/mL was defined as deficiency.
RESULTSAll the pregnant women had a vitamin D level < 30 ng/mL at the beginning of the second trimester. The neonates of 76% of women from Group A had sufficient levels of 25(OH)D. All the neonates born to women in Groups B and C had 25(OH)D > 20 ng/mL. No side effects were observed in our participants during the period of vitamin D supplementation.
CONCLUSIONA vitamin D3dose > 50,000 IU/month is required during the second and third trimesters of pregnancy for vitamin D-deficient pregnant women in order for their neonates to achieve serum 25(OH)D levels > 20 ng/mL. Supplementation with < 50,000 IU/month is insufficient to ensure a vitamin D level > 20 ng/mL in all neonates born to vitamin D-deficient pregnant women.
Adult ; Birth Weight ; Dietary Supplements ; Female ; Fetal Blood ; chemistry ; Humans ; Infant, Newborn ; Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ; Pregnancy ; Pregnancy Complications ; blood ; drug therapy ; Prevalence ; Vitamin D ; administration & dosage ; blood ; therapeutic use ; Vitamin D Deficiency ; drug therapy ; prevention & control ; Young Adult
10.Comparison of two regimens of vitamin D supplementation for vitamin D-deficient neonates.
Mehrdad SHAKIBA ; Ali PAHLOOSYE ; Mehrdad MIROULIAEI ; Zia ISLAMI
Singapore medical journal 2014;55(5):266-270
INTRODUCTIONVitamin D deficiency is common in pregnant women, and supplementation of vitamin D is necessary for the infants of these women. This study explored the efficacy of an alternative way of vitamin D supplementation in an area with a high prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in mothers.
METHODSThis was a non-randomised clinical trial conducted in 2010 in Yazd, Iran. Full-term healthy infants born to vitamin D-deficient mothers (n = 82) were divided into the high-dose regimen (HDR; single oral bolus 30,000 IU vitamin D3, n = 34) and the standard-dose regimen (SDR; 400 IU/day vitamin D3 within two weeks of life, n = 48) groups. 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) was measured using chemiluminescent immunoassays, and 25OHD level > 20 ng/mL was deemed sufficient.
RESULTSOver 90% of infants in the HDR group attained vitamin D sufficiency within one month, while comparable sufficiency was reached in the SDR group only after four months. At two months, the proportion of infants attaining 25OHD > 30 ng/mL was 93.3% and 27.9% in the HDR and SDR groups, respectively (p = 0.003). None of our infants achieved 25OHD levels > 100 ng/mL.
CONCLUSIONFor infants born to vitamin D-deficient mothers, oral supplementation of 30,000 IU vitamin D3 during the first month of life, followed by a routine recommended dose of 400 IU/day, should be considered. The four-month lag for attaining vitamin D sufficiency in 90% of infants in the SDR group may have clinical implications and should be further investigated.
Dietary Supplements ; Female ; Humans ; Immunoassay ; Infant ; Infant, Newborn ; Iran ; Luminescence ; Male ; Pregnancy ; Prevalence ; Time Factors ; Treatment Outcome ; Vitamin D ; administration & dosage ; analogs & derivatives ; therapeutic use ; Vitamin D Deficiency ; drug therapy