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Published:
15 y
Re: Thanks
Tom- good to hear that you are well. Perhaps your friend would find this study interesting:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19715928
note one of the conclusions, that D3 supplements had no effect on blood levels of 25(oh)D... assuming I am reading the pharma speak correctly. all the docs could do was shrug their shoulders... someone should let them know, this finding fits Marshall's model... at lease they were honest though, and admitted that the topic required more study, which it does.
John
INTRODUCTION: The Kidney Disease Outcome Quality Initiative (K/DOQI) clinical practice guidelines in chronic kidney disease (CKD) give some recommendations about diagnosis and treatment of vitamin D deficiency. These guidelines may also be applied to renal transplant recipients. The aim of the present study was to assess the vitamin D status and the effects of vitamin D3 supplements among a cohort of kidney graft recipients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Five hundred nine renal transplant recipients with a follow-up of more than 12 months were included in this retrospective cross-sectional study. A total of 189 patients were treated with vitamin D3 supplements, 171 with calcitriol (0.25 or 0.5 microg x 3 weekly) and 18 with cholecalciferol (400 IU/d). RESULTS: 25OHD deficiency was present in 38.3% of patients, insufficiency in 46.9%, and normal levels in 14.7%. There were no differences in the prevalence of deficiency or insufficiency between patients who were not treated or those who were treated with vitamin D3 supplements. Upon multivariate analysis, 25OHD concentrations correlated with gender, length of follow-up, season of 25OHD determination, iPTH and 1.25OHD concentrations, and treatment with ACEI/ARB (R(2) = 0.17; P = .000). CONCLUSIONS: 25OHD deficiency or insufficiency is frequent after renal transplantation even in sunny regions. The clinical significance of such a high prevalence of apparent 25OHD deficiency/insufficiency is unclear and requires further study.
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