The Missing Vitamin: Vitamin D - Home
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Transcript The Missing Vitamin: Vitamin D - Home
Calcium & Vitamin D
Physiology
Bob Bing-You, MD, MEd, MBA
ME Center for Endocrinology
Scarborough, Maine
Importance of Calcium
Tight physiologic range
Normal function muscle, nerves, PLTs,
coagulation factor
Cofactor for enzymes
Membrane stability
So we can stay upright!
Calcium balance
Net intestinal Ca absorption ~zero when
intake <200 mg/d
need >400 mg/d to maintain Ca balance
>1000 mg/d, intestinal absorption tends to
plateau
Calcium absorption
1,25-OH vitamin D [calcitriol] only
hormonal stimulus for active absorption
acts primarily on duodenum, jejunum
fairly linear increase in Ca absorption with
increasing calcitriol levels
The following statement is true:
A. You can get enough vitamin D through
a window
B. Osteoblasts are the “PAC-men meanies”
C. 1,25-D is better than 25-D for Ca
absorption
D. Serum Ca reflects most of our Ca stores
History of vitamin D
Century-old documents described Vit D
disease
Rickets in industrial England
1919- rickets produced in dogs fed oatmeal
indoors, cured with cod-liver oil
1923- skin precursor identified
1930’s – chemistry determined
Normal vitamin D internal
production
Skin: Vit D3 [cholecalciferol], made by
ultraviolet light [can’t get it through
windows!]
Liver: 25-hydroxy Vit D
Kidney: 1,25-dihydroxy Vit D [calcitriol]
=active form which acts on intestines
– Stimulated by parathyroid hormone
Vitamin D deficiency
Osteomalacia [bone without calcium]
Parathyroid glands come to defense at
sacrifice of bones
Risk of fractures
Cancer risk?
How does one get deficient?
Winter months [Boston Univ. studies: Nov
– Feb]
Age related changes: Skin does not convert
Vit D3; less intestinal absorption
Sun screen
Liver or kidney disease
How much sunlight do you need?
A. None, too dangerous
B. One hour a week
C. 20 minutes 4 days a week
D. One hour a day
Dietary sources of vitamin D
Egg yolks
Fatty fish like salmon
Fatty fish oils like cod liver oil
Supplemented foods [milk 400IU/Liter,
cereals, breads]
Typical adult diet <100 IU
How do we detect deficiency?
25-hydroxy Vit D level
Reflects nutritional stores over months
1,25 Vit D expensive and short-lived
normal level, probably > 30 ng/ml
This level quiets down parathyroids
Medical conditions
Hypoparathyroidism
Chronic renal failure
Intestinal osteodystrophy [e.g., celiac
sprue, gastric bypass]
Supplements suggested
DRI [Dietary Reference Intake]: minimum
amount to prevent diseases from deficiency
Not for optimal health
International Units [40 IU Vit D = 1
microgram]
400 IU?, 800?, 1000?
>2000 IU – should be monitored
Vitamin D preparations
Calcitriol [1,25 vit-D]
– Rocaltrol 0.25 to 0.5 mcg per day
– Calcijex parenteral 1-2 mcg/ml
Calcifediol [25- vit D]
– less effective in gut Ca absorption, less
hypercalcemia risk
Too much is possible!
Stays in fat tissue long time
Increases calcium loss from bone
Premature heart attacks
High blood levels, kidney stones
Too much sun doesn’t cause Vit D toxicity
Watch out for Vitamin A combo [some
tablets are cod liver oil, with both A & D]
Causes Hypocalcemia
Is it truly low? Mental calculation to correct
results Ca upwards for low albumin [about 1 to 1]
b/c serum total Ca measures bound Ca to albumin
– or measure ionized Ca [“free” amount]’ ?reliable test
Vitamin D deficiency
Hypoparathyroidism
– surgery
– functional [Mg]
Alkalosis
Assuming a normal albumin is 4: if your patient has a total
Ca reported at 7.0, & with an albumin of 2, what would be
the corrected Ca [mentally calculate it]:
A. 5.0
B. 7.0
C. 9.0
D. 10.0
E. I need a calculator
Hypocalcemia - signs/sx’s
Paraesthesias
tetany, carpopedal spasm, muscle cramps
Chvostek’s sign
Trousseau’s sign
Prolonged QT
seizures of all types
Laryngospasm, bronchospasm
Hypocalcemia - treatment
Any symptomatic patient, or asymptomatic
with Ca <7.5
Ca gluconate 10 ml [90 mg] IV in 50 ml
D5W or NS, over 5 minutes
repeat injections or go with infusion [10
ampules in 1 liter @ 50 ml/hr]
start vitamin D if prolonged course
expected; replace Mg if necessary
Calcium
Carbonate [40% elemental Ca]
Lactate [13%]
Phosphate [25%]
Citrate [17%]
Gluconate best for IV- least irritating
Calcium
Carbonate [TUMS]: low cost, antacid
properties, highest Ca %
Constipation
1000 - 1500 mg/ day
achlorhydric pts should take with food
IV infusions: watch Ca x Phos product
Causes hypercalcemia
Outpatient- primary hyperparathyroidism
Inpatient - malignancy
Less common
–
–
–
–
–
pheochromocytoma
meds: lithium, thiazides, vit D
hyperthyroidism
TB, sarcoid,
critical illness
Parathyroid
Needed to facilitate 1,25 hydroxylation
calcium sensing receptor
negative feedback loop
1-84 amino acids, N-terminal active
component
Hyperparathyroidism
Secondary - due to low serum Ca
Primary - due to single adenoma
– Mulitple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome
– surgery: bone loss, kidney stones, serum Ca
>11.5 mg%
– Medical Rx: receptor blocker [Cinacalcet]
Hypercalcemia - signs/sx’s
Lethargy, stupor, coma
mental status changes
N/V, constipation
HTN, short QT, AV block
weakness, bone pain
stones, fractures
Hypercalcemia - treatment
Hydration
Furosemide
bisphosphonates [zoledronic acid,
pamidronate, etidronate]
calcitonin
steroids for hematologic malignancies
dialysis for renal patients; watch Ca x Phos
Take-home points
Calcium balance important for normal
physiologic functions
we all need vitamin D!
hypocalcemia life-threatening
hypercalcemia either PHT or malignancy
Websites
www.uwcme.org/courses/bonephy [Dr
Susan Ott]
www.osteoporosis.ca [Osteoporosis
Society of Canada]
www.aad.org [Acad of Dermatology]
www.vitamin-d.com,
www.nutritionfarm.com, www.merck.com