Vitamin D deficiency in septic patients at ICU admission is not a mortality predictor.
Minerva Anestesiol. 2011 Jun 30.
Cecchi A, Bonizzoli M, Douar S, Mangini M, Paladini S, Gazzini B, Degl'innocenti S, Linden M, Zagli G, Peris A.
Anesthesia and Intensive Care Unit, Emergency Department, Careggi Teaching Hospital, Florence, Italy - giovanni.zagli at unifi.it
BACKGROUND:
Vitamin D is involved in immune regulation in humans. Vitamin D serum deficiency is reported to be common in hospitalized patients, especially among Intensive Care Unit (ICU) patients. Our aim was to evaluate the relationship between vitamin D levels in septic patients and outcome.
METHODS:
A total of 170 patients were studied, of which 92 were severe sepsis/septic shock patients, and 72 were major trauma patients, as an age-matched control group. Exclusion criteria were: age <18 years (y), malnutrition state, pregnancy, breast feeding, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, pathologies affecting bone and calcium metabolism, vitamin D metabolism derangement for therapy, hematological and solid malignancies, and HIV. Vitamin D levels were measured by radioimmunoassay at admission.
RESULTS:
Median vitamin D levels at admission to ICU were 10.1 ng/mL in the sepsis group and 18.4 ng/mL in the trauma group (P<0.0001). In univariate analysis, mortality rate in septic patients was significantly correlated with age, gender, SAPS II, vitamin D level at admission, duration of mechanical ventilation, and ICU/hospital length of stay, however, the multivariate logistic regression model confirmed significance only for age.
CONCLUSION:
In our cohort, septic patients showed a significantly lower vitamin D level than trauma patients in comparison to age cohort patients with the same demographic/clinical characteristics, but no clear relationship between vitamin D level and outcome was found. Further studies with larger samples are needed to clarify the prognostic role of vitamin D and nutraceutical interventions in critically ill patients.
PMID: 21720281
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Looks like all Septic patients had low vitamin D: average 10 ng. No difference if 8 ng or 12 nanogram of vitamin D
To make a difference they would have needed to have raised the patients blood levels to perhaps > 40 nanogram
See also VitaminDWiki
- HMOs and many others can save money with vitamin D
- all items: Low vitamin D due to surgery or trauma
351 items - Sepsis bacteria can be killed by blue as well as UV light – Jan 2013
Septic patients vitamin D so low that small changes did not matter – June 20113402 visitors, last modified 29 Jan, 2013,