Vitamin D deficiency: Difference between revisions
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**Regulated by PTH, serum calcium, and phosphorus levels | **Regulated by PTH, serum calcium, and phosphorus levels | ||
==Etiology== | ==Etiology of Vitamin D Deficiency== | ||
*Inadequate intake | *Inadequate intake | ||
**Dietary sources such as fortified foods and supplements are the mainstay of vitamin D intake | **Dietary sources such as fortified foods and supplements are the mainstay of vitamin D intake | ||
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*Conditions preventing vitamin D conversion into active metabolites | *Conditions preventing vitamin D conversion into active metabolites | ||
**[[Renal Failure]] | **[[Renal Failure]] | ||
**[[Liver Failure]] | **[[Liver Failure]] | ||
==Clinical Features== | ==Clinical Features== | ||
Revision as of 23:19, 12 January 2017
Background
- AKA: Hypovitaminosis D
- Vitamin D
- Lipid soluble
- Acts as a hormone which:
- Stimulates intestinal calcium absorption
- Maintains adequate phosphate levels for bone development
- Regulates cell growth proliferation and apoptosis
- Modulates immune function and inflammation reduction
- Deficiency leads to impaired bone mineralization and disease such as:
- Rickets in children
- Osteomalacia and Osteoporosis in adults
Metabolism and Physiology of Vitamin D
- Vitamin D gained from diet, supplements, or sunlight exposure
- Vitamin D undergoes hydroxylation in the liver producing 25-hydroxyvitamin D
- A second hydroxylation occurs in the kidney producing 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D which is the active form of vitamin D
- This step can occur extrarenally
- Regulated by PTH, serum calcium, and phosphorus levels
Etiology of Vitamin D Deficiency
- Inadequate intake
- Dietary sources such as fortified foods and supplements are the mainstay of vitamin D intake
- Foods rich in vitamin D include fatty fish, egg yolks, fish liver oil, and some mushrooms
- Inadequate sunlight exposure
- Synthesis of vitamin D occurs in the skin through exposure to ultraviolet B radiation from sunlight
- Factors associated with vitamin D deficiency include darker skin pigmentation, prolong winter season, living at higher latitudes, skin coverage
- Disorders limiting vitamin D absorption
- Conditions preventing vitamin D conversion into active metabolites
Clinical Features
Differential Diagnosis
Evaluation
- Definition of vitamin D deficiency:
- 25 Hydroxy-vitamin D < 25nmol/L
