Loading...
 
Toggle Health Problems and D

Osteoarthritis does not benefit from small amounts of vitamin D


Vitamin D in the Prevention and Treatment of Osteoarthritis: From Clinical Interventions to Cellular Evidence - Jan 2019

Nutrients. 2019 Jan 22;11(2). pii: E243. doi: 10.3390/nu11020243.
Park CY.

 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki

Older adults are recommended vitamin D to prevent fractures. Though this population is also at risk of osteoarthritis (OA), the effect of vitamin D on OA is unclear and may differ by disease state. The relationship between vitamin D and OA during OA initiation and progression were considered in this narrative review of in vivo and in vitro studies. Regarding OA initiation in humans, the small number of published observational studies suggest a lack of association between induction of OA and vitamin D status. Most randomized controlled trials were performed in White OA patients with relatively high vitamin D status (>50 nmol/L). These studies found no benefit of vitamin D supplementation on OA progression. However, subset analyses and one randomized controlled pilot trial indicated that vitamin D supplementation may alleviate joint pain in OA patients with low vitamin D status (<50 nmol/L). As the etiology of OA is recently being more fully uncovered, better animal and cell models are needed. According to currently available clinical results, evidence is lacking to set a vitamin D level to prevent OA, and increasing vitamin D status above 50 nmol/L does not seem to benefit OA patients.


50,000 IU Vitamin D a month did not reduce Knee Osteroarthritis - July 2018

Vitamin D supplementation and inflammatory and metabolic biomarkers in patients with knee osteoarthritis: post hoc analysis of a randomised controlled trial.
Br J Nutr. 2018 Jul;120(1):41-48. doi: 10.1017/S0007114518001174.
Zheng S1, Wang B2, Han W1, Zhu Z1, Wang X1, Jin X1, Antony B1, Cicuttini F2, Wluka A2, Winzenberg T1, Aitken D1, Blizzard L1, Jones G1, Ding C1.
1 Menzies Institute for Medical Research,University of Tasmania,Hobart,TAS,Australia.
2 Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine,Monash University,VIC,Australia.
Erratum in: Vitamin D supplementation and inflammatory and metabolic biomarkers in patients with knee osteoarthritis: post hoc analysis of a randomised controlled trial - Corrigendum. [Br J Nutr. 2019]
 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki

The aim of this study was to determine whether vitamin D supplementation and maintaining vitamin D sufficiency are associated with changes in inflammatory and metabolic biomarkers in patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA) and vitamin D deficiency. A total of 413 participants with symptomatic knee OA and vitamin D deficiency were enrolled in a randomised, placebo-controlled trial and received 1·25 mg vitamin D3 or placebo monthly for 24 months across two sites. In this post hoc analysis, 200 participants from one site (ninety-four from the placebo group and 106 from the vitamin D group; mean age 63·1 (sd 7·3) years, 53·3 % women) were randomly selected for measurement of serum levels of inflammatory and metabolic biomarkers at baseline and 24 months using immunoassays. In addition, participants were classified into two groups according to serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels at months 3 and 24: (1) not consistently sufficient (25(OH)D≤50 nmol/l at either month 3 or 24, n 61), and (2) consistently sufficient (25(OH)D>50 nmol/l at both months 3 and 24, n 139). Compared with placebo, vitamin D supplementation had no significant effect on change in serum high-sensitive C-reactive protein, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, leptin, adiponectin, resistin, adipsin and apelin. Being consistently vitamin D sufficient over 2 years was also not associated with changes in these biomarkers compared with not being consistently sufficient. Vitamin D supplementation and maintaining vitamin D sufficiency did not alter serum levels of inflammatory and metabolic biomarkers over 2 years in knee OA patients who were vitamin D insufficient, suggesting that they may not affect systemic inflammation in knee OA patients.

Title was revised Sept 2019 which caused the visitor count to reset.
There have actually been 4367 visitors to this page since it was originally made



Created by admin. Last Modification: Saturday September 7, 2019 16:21:27 GMT-0000 by admin. (Version 10)
Osteoarthritis does not benefit from small amounts of vitamin D        
3969 visitors, last modified 07 Sep, 2019,
(Cached) Printer Friendly Follow this page for updates

Attached files

ID Name Comment Uploaded Size Downloads
12595 Knee osteo 50,000 per month.pdf admin 07 Sep, 2019 290.08 Kb 553
11740 Osteoarthritis - From Clinical Interventions to Cellular Evidence.pdf admin 10 Apr, 2019 266.51 Kb 704