| Literature DB >> 29721511 |
Naiem Moiemen1, Janet M Lord2, Khaled Al-Tarrah2,1, Martin Hewison3.
Abstract
Vitamin D deficiency is common among the general population. It is also observed in up to 76% of critically ill patients. Despite the high prevalence of hypovitaminosis D in critical illness, vitamin D is often overlooked by medical staff as the clinical implications and consequences of vitamin D deficiency in acute contexts remain to be fully understood. Vitamin D has a broad range of pleotropic effects on various processes and systems including the immune-inflammatory response. 1α,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25(OH)2D), has been shown to promote a tolerogenic immune response limiting deleterious inflammatory effects, modulation of the innate immune system, and enhancement of anti-microbial peptides. Vitamin D deficiency is frequently observed in critically ill patients and has been related to extrinsic causes (i.e., limited sunlight exposure), magnitude of injury/illness, or the treatment started by medical doctors including fluid resuscitation. Low levels of vitamin D in critically ill patients have been associated with sepsis, organ failure, and mortality. Despite this, there are subpopulations of critical illness, such as burn patients, where the literature regarding vitamin D status and its influence on outcomes remain insufficient. Thermal injury results in damage to both burned and non-burned tissues, as well as induces an exaggerated and persistent immune-inflammatory and hypermetabolic response. In this review, we propose potential mechanisms in which burn injury affects the vitamin D status and summarizes current literature investigating the influence of vitamin D status on outcomes. In addition, we reviewed the literature and trials investigating vitamin D supplementation in critically ill patients and discuss the therapeutic potential of vitamin D supplementation in burn and critically ill patients. We also highlight current limitations of studies that have investigated vitamin D status and supplementation in critical illness. Thermal injury influences vitamin D status. More studies investigating vitamin D depletion in burn patients and its influence on prognosis, via standardized methodology, are required to reach definitive conclusions and influence clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Burns; Critical care; Critically ill; Thermal injury; Trauma; Vitamin D
Year: 2018 PMID: 29721511 PMCID: PMC5910591 DOI: 10.1186/s41038-018-0113-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Burns Trauma ISSN: 2321-3868
Fig. 1Overview of the vitamin D axis
Effects of vitamin D on various human cell types and tissues
| Target cells/tissues | Effects of vitamin D | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Adipocytes | • Inhibits intracellular fat accumulation | [ |
| Cardiomyocytes | • Inhibition of cell proliferation without apoptosis | [ |
| Hepatocytes | • Protects against insulin resistance | [ |
| Myocytes | • Modulation of calcium homeostasis and influx | [ |
| Nephrocytes | • Upregulation of cellular metabolic activity, IL-6, and reactive oxygen species | [ |
| Neurons | • Neuroactive steroid modulating spontaneous regular firing, actin potential duration, and intrinsic excitability | [ |
| T cells | • Inhibits Th1/Th17 chemokine/cytokine secretion (CXCL-10, IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-17) | [ |
| B cells | • Downregulates the proliferation of memory B cells | [ |
| Antigen-presenting cells | • Inhibits the expression of class II MHC molecules (HLA-DR) | [ |
| NK cells | • Inhibition of NK cell development and differentiation | [ |
TGF-β Transforming growth factor-β, TNF-α Tumor necrosis factor, IL Interleukin, IFN-γ Interferon-γ, MCP-1 Monocyte chemotactic protein 1, NK Natural killer
Fig. 2Potential causes of vitamin D deficiency following injury
Summary of clinical trials investigating vitamin D supplementation in critically ill patients
| Amrein [ | 2011 | Austria | Single-center multidisciplinary ICU patients | 25 | ELISA | Single dose of cholecalciferol 540,000 IU | Oral | No statistical difference in assessed clinical outcome including mechanical ventilation, vasopressor dependency, hospital stay, ICU stay, and hospital mortality | None |
| Amrein [ | 2014 | Austria | Single-center multidisciplinary ICU patients | 475 | LC-MS/MS | Single dose of cholecalciferol 540,000 IU followed by a monthly dose of 90,000 IU for 5 months | Oral | No statistical difference in assessed clinical outcomes including hospital length of stay, hospital mortality, and 6-month mortality. Significant lower hospital mortality observed in critically severe vitamin D-deficient patients. | At month 6, 4 of 37 vitamin D-supplemented patients (11%) developed total calcium levels of > 10.6 mg/dL vs 1 of 43 patients in placebo group |
| Leaf [ | 2014 | USA | Multicenter multidisciplinary ICU patients with severe sepsis and septic shock | 67 | LC-MS/MS | Single dose of calcitriol 2 μg | Intravenous | No influence on clinical outcome, mixed effects on inflammatory markers | None |
| Quraishi [ | 2015 | USA | Single-center multidisciplinary ICU patients with severe sepsis and septic shock | 30 | ELISA | Single dose of cholecalciferol 200,000 or 400,000 IU | Oral | Associated with increased cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide levels, no effect on c-reactive protein | None |
| Nair [ | 2015 | Australia | Single-center multidisciplinary ICU patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome | 50 | LC-MS and ELISA | Single dose of cholecalciferol 150,000 or 300,000 IU | Oral | Associated with increased levels of cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide and reduction in pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin 6 | None |
| Han [ | 2016 | USA | Multicenter multidisciplinary ventilated ICU patients | 30 | IA and ELISA | Daily doses of cholecalciferol 50,000 or 100,000 IU for 5 days | Oral | Hospital length of stay significantly decreased | None |
| Alizadeh [ | 2016 | Iran | Single-center surgical ICU patients | 59 | ELISA | Single dose of cholecalciferol 600,000 IU | Intramuscular | Adiponectin, biomarker of insulin sensitivity, is significantly elevated. No effect on homoeostasis model assessment for insulin resistance and homestasis model assessment adiponectin. | Not reported |
| Han [ | 2017 | USA | Multicenter multidisciplinary ventilated ICU patients | 30 | ELISA | Daily doses of cholecalciferol 50,000 or 100,000 IU for 5 days | Oral | Associated with increasing systemic levels of mRNA expression of human cationic antimicrobial protein overtime. No effect on circulating cathelicidin and human β-defensin. | None |