Literature DB >> 22145446

A potential role for adjunctive vitamin D therapy in the management of weight gain and metabolic side effects of second-generation antipsychotics.

Benjamin U Nwosu1, Bruce Meltzer, Louise Maranda, Carol Ciccarelli, Daniel Reynolds, Laura Curtis, Jean King, Jean A Frazier, Mary M Lee.   

Abstract

Second-generation antipsychotic (SGA) medications introduced about 20 years ago are increasingly used to treat psychiatric illnesses in children and adolescents. There has been a five-fold increase in the use of these medications in U.S. children and adolescents in the past decade. However, there has also been a parallel rise in the incidence of side effects associated with these medications, such as obesity, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, and diabetes mellitus. Despite the severity of these complications and their financial impact on the national healthcare budget, there is neither a clear understanding of the mechanisms contributing to these side effects nor the best ways to address them. Studies that examined lifestyle modification and pharmaceutical agents have yielded mixed results. Therefore, clinical studies using agents, such as vitamin D, which are inexpensive, readily available, with low side effects profile, and have mechanisms to counteract the metabolic side effects of SGA agents, are warranted. Vitamin D is a prohormone with skeletal and extraskeletal properties that could potentially reduce the severity of these metabolic side effects. Its role as an adjunctive therapy for the management of metabolic side effects of SGA agents has not been adequately studied. Effective strategies to curb these side effects will improve the overall health of youths with psychiatric illnesses who receive SGAs. Herein we present a pilot study on the use of vitamin D in patients on treatment with SGAs.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22145446      PMCID: PMC4094142          DOI: 10.1515/jpem.2011.300

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr Endocrinol Metab        ISSN: 0334-018X            Impact factor:   1.634


  83 in total

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8.  Hypovitaminosis D in obese children and adolescents: relationship with adiposity, insulin sensitivity, ethnicity, and season.

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Review 10.  Regulation of food intake and energy expenditure by hypothalamic malonyl-CoA.

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Review 2.  Managing cardiovascular disease risk in patients treated with antipsychotics: a multidisciplinary approach.

Authors:  Matisyahu Shulman; Avraham Miller; Jason Misher; Aleksey Tentler
Journal:  J Multidiscip Healthc       Date:  2014-10-31

3.  Dietary adequacy of vitamin D and calcium among Inuit and Inuvialuit women of child-bearing age in Arctic Canada: a growing concern.

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4.  Prevention of antipsychotic-induced hyperglycaemia by vitamin D: a data mining prediction followed by experimental exploration of the molecular mechanism.

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  4 in total

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