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Vitamin D deficiency and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a vicious circle.

Vitamins and hormones
January 1, 2011
Wim Janssens et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine the role of calcium and vitamin D supplementation in reducing risks for falling, osteoporotic fractures, and potential indirect effects on morbidity and pulmonary function in COPD patients.

Results Summary

Adequate calcium and vitamin D supplementation in COPD patients with deficiencies reduced the risk of falling and osteoporotic fractures, potentially lowering morbidity and preventing further deterioration of pulmonary function. Epidemiological studies also linked vitamin D deficiency to higher risks of cardiovascular, inflammatory, infectious diseases, and cancer, which are associated with COPD.

Population

COPD patients, particularly those with documented vitamin D deficiency and osteoporosis.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (9)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Vitamin D and vitamin D deficiency
neutral
different pathogenic mechanisms in COPD
-
-
strongly interact with
#1
Vitamin D deficiency
increase
Prevalence
COPD patients
-
is particularly high
#2
Vitamin D deficiency
increase
the severity of COPD
-
-
increases with
#3
Vitamin D deficiency
increase
osteoporosis prevalence
-
-
is closely associated with
#4
Adequate calcium and vitamin D supplementation
decrease
the risk for falling and osteoporotic fractures
COPD patients with documented deficiencies
-
reduces
#5
Adequate calcium and vitamin D supplementation
decrease
morbidity
COPD patients with documented deficiencies
-
may indirectly reduce
#6
Adequate calcium and vitamin D supplementation
decrease
the further deterioration of pulmonary function
COPD patients with documented deficiencies
-
may potentially prevent
#7
Vitamin D supplements
increase
bone and muscle tissue
-
-
proven beneficial effects on
#8
Vitamin D deficiency
increase
a higher risk for cardiovascular, inflammatory and infectious diseases, and cancer
-
-
putatively linked with
#9
Abstract

Vitamin D and vitamin D deficiency strongly interact with different pathogenic mechanisms in COPD. Prevalence of vitamin D deficiency is particularly high in COPD patients, increases with the severity of COPD, and is closely associated with osteoporosis prevalence. Adequate calcium and vitamin D supplementation in COPD patients with documented deficiencies reduces the risk for falling and osteoporotic fractures, may indirectly reduce morbidity, and may potentially prevent the further deterioration of pulmonary function. Apart from the proven beneficial effects of vitamin D supplements on bone and muscle tissue, many epidemiological studies have putatively linked vitamin D deficiency with a higher risk for cardiovascular, inflammatory and infectious diseases, and cancer, diseases known to be associated with and to contribute significantly to the phenotypic presentation of COPD patients. Different animal and human studies have provided considerable evidence on how vitamin D may affect these processes. The burning question in COPD is whether prevention of vitamin D deficiency or adequate supplementation may reverse the natural course of the disease.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AnimalsCalcium, DietaryDietary SupplementsHumansOsteoporosisPulmonary Disease, Chronic ObstructiveVitamin DVitamin D Deficiency
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations47
Citations/Year3.4
Relative Citation Ratio1.55
NIH Percentile66.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score0.71
Normalized Score0.66
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