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Skeletal Muscle weakness from lack of vitamin D fixed by adding Calcium and phosphorus – Aug 2010

Hypophosphatemia is responsible for skeletal muscle weakness of vitamin D deficiency.

Arch Biochem Biophys 500(2):157-61 (2010)
profile Laurie Schubert and profile Hector F DeLuca
Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 53706-1544, United States.

A deficiency of vitamin D results in muscle weakness as well as rickets in children and osteomalacia in the adult. To study the basis for this weakness, severe vitamin D deficiency was produced in rats as revealed by a low level or absence of 25-hydroxyvitamin D(3) in the serum. Vitamin D deficiency was achieved by feeding purified diets to weanlings for 16 weeks. Muscle force, peak contraction (P), time-to-half contraction (T(1/2)), time-to-peak contraction (T(P)), and time-to-half recovery (T(1/2r)) were measured. A significant reduction in muscle force was found when vitamin D deficiency was accompanied by hypophosphatemia.

Within 2 days of correcting the hypophosphatemia, muscle strength was normalized. When serum calcium and serum phosphorus were maintained in the normal range in vitamin D-deficient rats, muscle weakness did not develop. Further, hypocalcemia together with vitamin D deficiency did not produce muscle weakness. These results strongly suggest that muscle weakness noted in rachitic patients is the result of the hypophosphatemia of vitamin D deficiency. 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. DOI: 10.1016/j.abb.2010.05.029 * PMID: 20515645