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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Vitamin D
sufficiency is required for optimal health. The conditions with strong evidence for a protective effect of vitamin D include several bone diseases, muscle weakness, more than a dozen types of internal cancers, multiple sclerosis, and
type 1 diabetes
mellitus. There is also weaker evidence for several other diseases and conditions. There are good reasons that vitamin D sufficiency be maintained during all stages of life, from fetal development to old age. Adequate calcium intake is also recommended. The current vitamin D requirements in the United States are based on protection against bone diseases. These guidelines are being revised upward in light of new findings, especially for soft-tissue health. The consensus of scientific understanding appears to be that vitamin D deficiency is reached for serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) levels less than 20 ng/mL (50 nmol/L), insufficiency in the range from 20-32 ng/mL, and sufficiency in the range from 33-80 ng/mL, with normal in sunny countries 54-90 ng/mL, and excess greater than 100 ng/mL. Solar ultraviolet-B (UVB) irradiation is the primary source of vitamin D for most people. In general, the health benefits accruing from moderate UV irradiation, without erythema or excess tanning, greatly outweigh the health risks, with skin pigmentation (melanin) providing much of the protection. In the absence of adequate solar UVB irradiation due to season, latitude, or lifestyle, vitamin D can be obtained from fortified food, oily fish, vitamin D supplements, and artificial sources of UVB radiation.
...
PMID:Benefits and requirements of vitamin D for optimal health: a review. 1598 79
Vitamin D
and interleukin (IL)-1 have been suggested to function in the pathogenesis of
type 1 diabetes
mellitus (T1DM). Therefore, we examined the influence of gene polymorphisms in vitamin D receptor (VDR) and interleukin-1 receptor type I (IL-1-R1) on susceptibility to T1DM in the Dalmatian population of South Croatia. We genotyped 134 children with T1DM and 132 controls; for FokI polymorphism studies, we extended the control group to an additional 102 patients. The VDR gene polymorphism FokI displayed unequal distribution (P = 0.0049) between T1DM and control groups, with the ff genotype occurring more frequently in T1DM individuals whereas the VDR gene polymorphism Tru9I did not differ in frequency between studied groups. All tested polymorphisms of the IL-1-R1 gene [PstI, HinfI, and AluI (promoter region) and PstI-e (exon 1B region)] displayed no differences between cases and controls. Haplotype analysis of the VDR gene (FokI, BsmI, ApaI, TaqI, Tru9I) and of the IL-1-R1 gene (PstI, HinfI, AluI, PstI-e) found haplotypes VDR FbATu (P = 0.0388) and IL-1-R1 phap' (P = 0.0419) to be more frequent in T1DM patients whereas the BatU haplotype occurred more often in controls (P = 0.0064). Our findings indicate that the VDR FokI polymorphism and several VDR and IL-1-R1 haplotypes are associated with susceptibility to T1DM in the Dalmatian population.
...
PMID:FokI polymorphism, vitamin D receptor, and interleukin-1 receptor haplotypes are associated with type 1 diabetes in the Dalmatian population. 1625 58
During the past decade, major advances have been made in vitamin D research that transcend the simple concept that vitamin D is Important for the prevention of rickets in children and has little physiologic relevance for adults. Inadequate vitamin D, in addition to causing rickets, prevents children from attaining their genetically programmed peak bone mass, contributes to and exacerbates osteoporosis in adults, and causes the often painful bone disease osteomalacia. Adequate vitamin D is also important for proper muscle functioning, and controversial evidence suggests it may help prevent
type 1 diabetes
mellitus, hypertension, and many common cancers.
Vitamin D
inadequacy has been reported in approximately 36% of otherwise healthy young adults and up to 57% of general medicine inpatients in the United States and in even higher percentages in Europe. Recent epidemiological data document the high prevalence of vitamin D inadequacy among elderly patients and especially among patients with osteoporosis. Factors such as low sunlight exposure, age-related decreases in cutaneous synthesis, and diets low in vitamin D contribute to the high prevalence of vitamin D inadequacy.
Vitamin D
production from cutaneous synthesis or intake from the few vitamin D-rich or enriched foods typically occurs only intermittently. Supplemental doses of vitamin D and sensible sun exposure could prevent deficiency in most of the general population. The purposes of this article are to examine the prevalence of vitamin D inadequacy and to review the potential implications for skeletal and extraskeletal health.
...
PMID:High prevalence of vitamin D inadequacy and implications for health. 1652 31
Vitamin D
from ultraviolet-B (UVB) irradiance, food, and supplements is receiving increased attention lately for its role in maintaining optimal health. Although the calcemic effects of vitamin D have been known for about a century, the non-calcemic effects have been studied intently only during the past two-three decades. The strongest links to the beneficial roles of UVB and vitamin D to date are for bone and muscle conditions and diseases. There is also a preponderance of evidence from a variety of studies that vitamin D reduces the risk of colon cancer, with 1000 IU/day of vitamin D or serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels >33 ng/mL (82 nmol/L) associated with a 50% lower incidence of colorectal cancer. There is also reasonable evidence that vitamin D reduces the risk of breast, lung, ovarian, and prostate cancer and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. There is weaker, primarily ecologic, evidence for the role of vitamin D in reducing the risk of an additional dozen types of cancer. There is reasonably strong ecologic and case-control evidence that vitamin D reduces the risk of autoimmune diseases including such as multiple sclerosis and
type 1 diabetes
mellitus, and weaker evidence for rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, type 2 diabetes mellitus, hypertension and stroke. It is noted that mechanisms whereby vitamin D exerts its effect are generally well understood for the various conditions and diseases discussed here.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of disease risks in relation to vitamin D insufficiency. 1654 42
Vitamin D
has been involved in the modulation of calcium and bone metabolism as well as in the immune system, where it suppresses the proliferation of activated T cells. These effects are exerted via the vitamin D receptor (VDR). Polymorphisms within this gene have been exhaustively studied in diverse autoimmune diseases but with inconsistent results. We previously reported a positive association of polymorphisms within the VDR gene (Apa I, Taq I, Bsm I, and Fok I). In the present article we extended our previous reports to seven additional polymorphisms (rs757343, rs9729, rs2853559, rs1989969, rs3847987, rs2238135, and rs4516035) in a larger set of German simplex
type 1 diabetes
families. Additionally we correlated serum levels of 25(OH)D(3) and 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) with VDR genotypes and haplotypes. The haplotypes "CG" (Taq I-Apa I), "CGG" (Taq I-Apa I-Tru I), "CGC" (Taq I-Apa I-Fok I), "GCTG" (rs9729-Taq I-Apa I-Tru I), and "CGGC"(Taq I-Apa I, Tru I, Fok I) were less often transmitted, thus negatively associated with
type 1 diabetes
. Patients who carried the genotype "CC" of the rs3847987 polymorphism had higher median serum levels of 25(OH)D(3). Furthermore, the majority of patients with this genotype possessed normal serum levels of 25(OH)D(3). We conclude that variants of the VDR may confer a genetic protection from
type 1 diabetes
. Furthermore, normal serum levels of 25(OH)D(3) appear to correlate with a VDR genotype. This supports a role of vitamin D in the immune pathogenesis of
type 1 diabetes
.
...
PMID:Protection from type 1 diabetes by vitamin D receptor haplotypes. 1713 May 74
Vitamin D
has been suggested to affect the balance between T helper (Th1) and (Th2) type cytokines by favouring Th2 domination. We investigated the association between infant vitamin D supplementation and later pre-eclampsia, a disorder suggested to be dominated by Th1 response. We used data on 2969 women born in the Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 of whom 68 (2.3%) had pre-eclampsia in their first pregnancy. Risk of pre-eclampsia was halved (OR 0.49, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.26-0.92) in participants who had received vitamin D supplementation regularly during the first year of life and this association was not affected by adjustment for own birth order, birth weight, gestational age, social class in 1966 and hospitalizations or pregnancy-induced hypertension of their mothers. Together with earlier observations on a reduced risk of
type 1 diabetes
after vitamin D supplementation, these data suggest that vitamin D intake in infancy may affect long-term programming of the immune response pattern.
...
PMID:Does vitamin D supplementation in infancy reduce the risk of pre-eclampsia? 1726 18
Vitamin D
has important immuno-modulatory properties and it influences insulin secretion. It acts through a vitamin D receptor (VDR), for which several gene polymorphisms have been described. The Uruguayan population presents several epidemiological characteristics that make it different from that of other counties, including other Latin-American countries. It went through miscegenation processes, with a tri-hybrid European, Amerindian and African origin, with no contribution from isolated Amerindian communities. Such differences have important consequences for the relationship between frequencies of several genes in the general population and their association with the diabetes mellitus. We examined the prevalence of VDR gene polymorphisms in the general population and their relation to
type 1 diabetes
in a parent-case design. One hundred unrelated individuals from the general population and 45 parent-patient triads with a child affected with
type 1 diabetes
were genotyped for FokI, BsmI and TaqI VDR gene polymorphisms by RFLP-PCR. We used a transmission disequilibrium test to assess preferential transmission of parents to affected offspring. The prevalence of the three VDR polymorphisms was: allele F = 48%, B = 35%, T = 64%. The f, b, T alleles and heterozygous genotypes were found at a high frequency in this population. Among 36 informative heterozygous parental genotypes, 30 transmitted the F allele (probability of transmission = 83%). The other two polymorphisms did not show significant transmission. We suggest that FokI polymorphism indicates susceptibility to
type 1 diabetes
mellitus in the Uruguayan population.
...
PMID:Prevalence of vitamin D receptor gene polymorphism in a Uruguayan population and its relation to type 1 diabetes mellitus. 1798 6
Type 1 diabetes mellitus
(T1DM) is a disease characterised by the autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells.
Vitamin D
is a known immune system modulator and its effects are exerted via the vitamin D receptor (VDR). Several VDR gene single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been commonly studied in relation to T1DM. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of VDR gene variation in T1DM susceptibility by genotyping four SNPs (FokI-rs10735810, TaqI-rs731236, BsmI-rs1544410, and Tru9I-rs757343) in 160 case-parent trio samples from the population of South Croatia. We observed overtransmission of Tru9I allele G and undertransmission of the Tru9I-BsmI A-A haplotype from parents to affected children (P = 0.032, P = 0.002, respectively). These results indicate a possible role of the VDR gene in T1DM aetiology. In conclusion, this family-based study presents some evidence of association of specific VDR gene variants with T1DM in the population of South Croatia.
...
PMID:Family-based analysis of vitamin D receptor gene polymorphisms and type 1 diabetes in the population of South Croatia. 1816 Oct
Many viral infections reach clinical significance in winter, when it is cold, relative humidity is lowest and vitamin D production from solar ultraviolet-B irradiation is at its nadir. Several autoimmune diseases, such as multiple sclerosis,
type 1 diabetes
mellitus and asthma, are linked to viral infections.
Vitamin D
, through induction of cathelicidin, which effectively combats both bacterial and viral infections, may reduce the risk of several autoimmune diseases and cancers by reducing the development of viral infections. Some types of cancer are also linked to viral infections. The cancers with seemingly important risk from viral infections important in winter, based on correlations with increasing latitude in the United States, an index of wintertime solar ultraviolet-B dose and vitamin D, are bladder, prostate, testicular and thyroid cancer, Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and, perhaps, gastric cancer. The evidence examined includes the role of viruses in the etiology of these diseases, the geographic and seasonal variation of these diseases, and the time of life when vitamin D is effective in reducing the risk of disease. In general, the evidence supports the hypothesis. However, further work is required to evaluate this hypothesis.
...
PMID:Hypothesis--ultraviolet-B irradiance and vitamin D reduce the risk of viral infections and thus their sequelae, including autoimmune diseases and some cancers. 1843 23
The active metabolite of vitamin D3 - 1,25-(OH)2D3 - exerts most of its physiological and pharmacological actions through its nuclear receptor (VDR), regulating the transcriptional machinery of a variety of cell types. Basic research motivated by the detection of VDR in numerous target cells, has indicated potential therapeutic applications of VDR ligands in osteoporosis, cancer, secondary hyperparathyroidism and autoimmune diseases such as psoriasis, systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis,
type 1 diabetes
and multiple sclerosis. In recent years vitamin D analogs, particularly calcipotriol and tacalcitol, have been used as topical therapeutic agents in vitiligo, an autoimmune pigmentary disorder characterized by aberrant loss of functional melanocytes from involved epidermis. The presence of cytotoxic T cells targeting melanocyte antigens and imbalance of the cytokine network were described as characteristics of the disease, eventually leading to melanocyte damage and death.
Vitamin D
ligands are designed to target the local immune response in vitiligo, acting on specific T cell activation, mainly by inhibiting the transition of T cells from early to late G1 phase and by inhibiting the expression of several pro-inflammatory cytokines genes, such as those encoding tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and interferon gamma (IFN-gamma).
Vitamin D
(3) compounds are known to influence melanocyte maturation and differentiation and also to up-regulate melanogenesis through pathways activated by specific ligand receptors, such as endothelin receptor and c-kit. In this review we summarize the complex pathogenetic rationale of vitamin D analogs in vitiligo depigmentation. Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms through which vitamin D targets the epidermal melanin unit is of great interest for identification of new effective therapeutic combination(s) that might induce repigmentation in vitiligo.
...
PMID:Cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in the action of vitamin D analogs targeting vitiligo depigmentation. 1839 27
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