ICU needs vitamin D - Vitamin D Council
Vitamin D and critical illness
clips from a post September 30, 2011 by Dr John Cannell
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Lee P. Vitamin D metabolism and deficiency in critical illness. - see below
“Collectively these results provide unequivocal evidence that vitamin D insufficiency and deficiency are highly prevalent among critically ill patients.”
“These results demonstrate current replacement regimes are grossly inadequate.”
He ends by citing studies showing death in the ICU and the CCU is 2-3 times higher for the vitamin D deficient.
Vitamin D metabolism and deficiency in critical illness.
Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2011 Oct;25(5):769-81.
Lee P.
Department of Diabetes and Endocrinology, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Australia; Centres for Health Research, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent and has been associated with a diverse range of chronic medical conditions in the general population.
In contrast, the prevalence, pathogenesis and significance of vitamin D deficiency have received little attention in acute medicine.
Vitamin D deficiency is seldom considered and rarely corrected adequately, if at all, in critically ill patients.
Recent recognition of the extra-skeletal, pleiotropic actions of vitamin D in
immunity,
epithelial function and
metabolic regulation
may underlie the previously under-recognized contribution of vitamin D deficiency to typical co-morbidities in critically ill patients, including
sepsis,
systemic inflammatory response syndrome and
metabolic dysfunction.
Improved understanding of vitamin D metabolism and regulation in critical illness may allow therapeutic exploitation of vitamin D to improve outcome in critically ill patients.
PMID: 21925077
See also Vitamin D Life
All items in After surgery or trauma 55 items as of Feb 2012
540,000 IU active vitamin D before ICU raised vitamin D level average at least 25 ng – March 2011
ICU time is 2X more likely to be longer than 2 days if vitamin D less than 20 ng – Mar 2011
Health Care Providers save $ by providing vitamin D before and/or after surgery or trauma - reduces the time in bed, etc.
Virtually all veterans in ICU had vitamin D less than 32 ng – Jan 2011