View clinical trials related to Vitamin D3 Deficiency.
Filter by:A prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study that aims to evaluate the effects of combined vitamin D3 and K2-MK7 supplementation on vascular function, sympathetic tone, metabolic biomarkers and inflammatory factors in a population of overweight or obese adults and deficient or insufficient serum levels of vitamin D.
Patients hospitalized in intensive care units (ICU) are particularly susceptible to vitamin D3 deficiencies. This can be due to the severity of their underlying disease, the type of treatment they are on, malnutrition before and inadequate nutrition during the hospitalisation preceding ICU admission, as well as advanced age. It has also been established that plasma levels of 25(OH)D3 tend to systematically decrease during ICU treatment. Therapeutic interventions administered in ICU settings such as fluid resuscitation or extracorporeal therapies can cause additional vitamin D3 deficiencies. The incidence of deficiency in critically ill patients can reach up to 90%, and even 30% of ICU patients can have undetectable plasma levels. It is impossible to replenish vitamin D3 levels in critically ill patients with traditional enteral and parenteral nutrition treatment regimens, because nutritional products contain too little of the vitamin. Vitamin D3 deficiency in critically ill patients has been associated with acute kidney injury, acute respiratory failure, sepsis, septic shock and increased all-cause ICU mortality. Despite that, assessment of plasma 25(OH)D3 levels is not a routine practice in ICUs. In view of the prevalence of vitamin D3 deficiencies in ICU patients, rapid replenishment of this deficiency with an increased supplementation dose should be considered as a potential means to improve prognosis in this patient population. The current standard therapy is the administration of 500,000 IU of vitamin D3 via the enteral route in ICU patients with severe deficiency (recommended by ESPEN). The NephroD study is meant to help answer the question whether increasing the standard ICU supplementation dose of vitamin D3 by 50% will ensure a more effective replenishment of this vitamin in critically ill patients undergoing CRRT.
Since vitamin D deficiency is a condition that affects a high percentage of individuals of all ages and given the attention on the possible role of the deficiency of this vitamin in the development of various chronic diseases, including cardiovascular and metabolic disease (obesity, insulin resistance, hypertension, diabetes) and the correlation with mortality from major cardiovascular events (heart failure, myocardial infarction, sudden cardiac death, stroke, atrial fibrillation and peripheral vascular disease), it is clear that in clinical practice it is necessary to provide screening tools characterized by a simple use, high efficacy and a low economic impact, useful to detect a possible deficiency state that has a significant impact on general health and therefore provide targeted interventions for diagnosis and supplementation when and if necessary. Therefore, the objective of this study project is part of the broader context of supporting, with reproducible and shared scientific data, operational protocols useful for the clinician to identify subjects potentially at risk of vitamin D deficiency as well as directing to the diagnostic and more effective therapeutic. Surveillance of vitamin D status should be a high priority in which easy-to-use and interpreted tools, such as the questionnaire developed for this study, could respond to the needs of early identification of subjects potentially at risk of hypovitaminosis D, thus supporting the work of the clinician.
This is a longitudinal single blind randomized trial to test the effects of high compared to low dose vitamin D3 supplementation on cognitive performance at 6 and 12 months, and MRI measures of 12 months duration. A cognitive assessment battery will be administered at baseline, 6 and 12 months. Related clinical data and information on depression and anxiety, lifestyle, and food sources of vitamin D and sun exposure among other variables will also be collected.