The Impact of Vitamin D on the Immunopathophysiology, Disease Activity, and Extra-Musculoskeletal Manifestations of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2018, 19(8), 2355; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms19082355 (registering DOI)
Anselm Mak 1,2
1 Department of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore 119228, Singapore
2 Division of Rheumatology, University Medicine Cluster, National University Health System, Singapore 119228, Singapore
- Lupus associated with low vitamin D – Caucasian 2.2 X, Arab 4.6 X – meta-analysis Jan 2018
- Juvenile Lupus treated by Vitamin D – need more studies to understand why– Jan 2018
- Lupus fought by Vitamin D in all trials longer than 12 weeks - review Sept 2017
- It is time to routinely give vitamin D to Lupus patients – Dec 2016
- Lupus category listing has
78 items along with related searches Items in both categories Lupus and Intervention are listed here:
- Lupus: 60,000 IU Vitamin D monthly got to only 34 ng, not enough to help – RCT Jan 2023
- Lupus reduced when half of participants got to 38 ng of Vitamin D (not statistically significant) – RCT Jan 2017
- Juvenile Lupus fatigue reduced by vitamin D ( 50,000 IU weekly for 6 months) – RCT May 2015
- Musculoskeletal pain reduced with 4,000 IU of vitamin D – RCT April 2015
- Lupus reduced with vitamin D intervention – Feb 2014
- Lupus flareups cut in half by just 2,000 IU of vitamin D – RCT Dec 2012
- Lupus flares totally eliminated by loading dose then 100000 IU of vitamin D each month – Oct 2012
 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki
Over the past two decades it has been increasingly recognized that vitamin D, aside from its crucial involvement in calcium and phosphate homeostasis and the dynamics of the musculoskeletal system, exerts its influential impact on the immune system. The mechanistic roles that vitamin D plays regarding immune activation for combating infection, as well as pathologically and mediating autoimmune conditions, have been progressively unraveled. In vitro and in vivo models have demonstrated that the action of vitamin D on various immunocytes is not unidirectional. Rather, how vitamin D affects immunocyte functions depends on the context of the immune response, in the way that its suppressive or stimulatory action offers physiologically appropriate and immunologically advantageous outcomes. In this review, the relationship between various aspects of vitamin D, starting from its adequacy in circulation to its immunological functions, as well as its autoimmune conditions, in particular systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), a prototype autoimmune condition characterized by immune-complex mediated inflammation, will be discussed. Concurring with other groups of investigators, our group found that vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent in patients with SLE. Furthermore, the circulating vitamin D levels appear to be correlated with a higher disease activity of SLE as well as extra-musculoskeletal complications of SLE such as fatigue, cardiovascular risk, and cognitive impairment.
Impact of Vitamin D on Lupus – Aug 20185005 visitors, last modified 10 Aug, 2018, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)Attached files
ID Name Uploaded Size Downloads 10327 Lupus Vit D.jpg admin 10 Aug, 2018 56.81 Kb 1765 10326 Lupus review.pdf admin 10 Aug, 2018 578.80 Kb 626