Search results for "DEFICIENCY"
showing 10 items of 1071 documents
Vitamin D and Osteoporosis in HIV/HCV Coinfected Patients: A Literature Review
2015
Vitamin D deficiency further increases the risk of osteoporosis in HIV-positive patients coinfected with hepatitis C virus (HCV); however, it is still unclear whether HCV-related increased fracture risk is a function of the severity of liver disease. The aim of this review was to identify studies on associative vitamin D deficiency patterns in high-risk populations such as HIV/HCV coinfected patients. We did this by searching MEDLINE and EMBASE databases, from inception to August 2014, and included bibliographies. The final 12 articles selected are homogeneous in terms of age but heterogeneous in terms of sample size, participant recruitment, and data source. Most of the HIV/HCV coinfected …
Preoperative nutritional deficiencies: epidemiology and prevalence of nutritional deficiencies among morbidly obese patients, specifying which ones s…
2021
Abstract Micronutrient deficiency is common in obese patients admitted for bariatric surgery, especially, a considerable prevalence of low levels of vitamin D, folic acid, vitamin B1, vitamin B12, vitamin A, vitamin E, zinc, iron, and selenium has been demonstrated. Patients who are candidates for bariatric surgery usually present various factors that cause the appearance of these deficiencies (inappropriate eating behavior, alcohol consumption, chronic subclinical infiammation, several diseases, and medications that can impact the blood levels of micronutrients). This higher prevalence of micronutrient deficiencies in obese people could also promote postoperative complications and postoper…
Vitamin D Sources, Metabolism, and Deficiency: Available Compounds and Guidelines for Its Treatment
2021
Studies on vitamin/hormone D deficiency have received a vast amount of attention in recent years, particularly concerning recommendations, guidelines, and treatments. Moreover, vitamin D’s role as a hormone has been confirmed in various enzymatic, metabolic, physiological, and pathophysiological processes related to many organs and systems in the human body. This growing interest is mostly due to the evidence that modest-to-severe vitamin D deficiency is widely prevalent around the world. There is broad agreement that optimal vitamin D status is necessary for bones, muscles, and one’s general health, as well as for the efficacy of antiresorptive and anabolic bone-forming treatments. Food su…
Vitamin A Deficiency and Alterations in the Extracellular Matrix
2014
Vitamin A or retinol which is the natural precursor of several biologically active metabolites can be considered the most multifunctional vitamin in mammals. Its deficiency is currently, along with protein malnutrition, the most serious and common nutritional disorder worldwide. It is necessary for normal embryonic development and postnatal tissue homeostasis, and exerts important effects on cell proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. These actions are produced mainly by regulating the expression of a variety of proteins through transcriptional and non-transcriptional mechanisms. Extracellular matrix proteins are among those whose synthesis is known to be modulated by vitamin A. Reti…
A Deficiency in Respiratory Complex I in Heart Mitochondria from Vitamin A-Deficient Rats Is Counteracted by an Increase in Coenzyme Q
1997
Defects of NADH:coenzyme Q oxidoreductase (complex I) of mitochondria have been described in many congenital and acquired diseases. Administration of coenzyme Q (CoQ, ubiquinone) has been shown to benefit patients with some of these diseases. However, the mechanisms by which CoQ exerts the therapeutic effects are not clearly understood. A reason could be the lack of saturation of CoQ, in kinetic terms, for complex I activity. However, this hypothesis has not been proved in vivo because of the difficulty to incorporate CoQ into the mitochondrial membranes. We have found a deficiency in respiratory complex I in heart mitochondria from vitamin A-deficient rats which was accompanied by high CoQ…
Vitamin A deficiency causes oxidative damage to liver mitochondria in rats.
2000
Mitochondrial damage in rat liver induced by chronic vitamin A-deficiency was studied using three different groups of rats: (i) control rats, (ii) rats fed a vitamin A-free diet until 50 d after birth and (iii) vitamin A-deficient rats re-fed a control diet for 30 d. No statistical difference in body weight and food intake was found between control and vitamin A-deficient rats. Liver GSH concentration was similar in both groups. However, in vitamin A-deficient rats, the mitochondrial GSH/GSSG ratio was significantly lower and the levels of malondialdehyde (MDA) and 8-oxo-7, 8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine (oxo8dG) were higher when compared to control rats. These values were partially restored i…
Folate deficiencies and cardiovascular pathologies.
1998
Abstract Although folates are widely distributed in foods, folate deficiencies may be more frequent than expected because their true availability may be impaired due to their lability under various food cooking and processing conditions. Folate deficiency is frequently observed in elderly people, smokers, alcoholics and oral contraceptive users. It is also associated with the mutation leading to the thermolabile variant of N5, 10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase which is observed in about 10 % of the population. In addition to the essential role of the intracellular pool of polyglutamates in de novo biosynthesis of deoxyribonucleotides which allow cell growth and division, the reduced an…
Vitamin A deficiency. New knowledge on diagnosis, consequences and therapy
1989
Due to the rapid development of biochemical analyses in the last 10 years different substances like vitamin A, with an apparent clarified metabolism and action, were re-estimated. As a result, new knowledge was presented which could be essential for human health. Some details and consequences are reviewed in this paper. Marginal deficiency, which also may occur in industrialized nations, cannot be determined with certainty by usual blood analyses. The reasons for marginal deficiency are either different diseases or unbalanced nutrition. From epidemiological research it is argued that low vitamin A intake is associated with a higher incidence of cancer in different tissues. However, vitamin …
The Role of Vitamin Deficiency in Liver Disease: To Supplement or Not Supplement?
2021
Over the past few years, growing interest has been shown for the impact of dietary requirements and nutritional factors on chronic diseases. As a result, nutritional programs have been reinforced by public health policies. The precise role of micronutrients in chronic liver disease is currently receiving particular attention since abnormalities in vitamin levels are often detected. At present, treatment programs are focused on correcting vitamin deficiencies, which are frequently correlated to higher rates of comorbidities with poor outcomes. The literature reviewed here indicates that liver diseases are often related to vitamin disorders, due to both liver impairment and abnormal intake. M…
Comparative assessment of the toxicology of vitamin A and retinoids in man.
1989
As the title implies, any assessment of the toxic effects of vitamin A derivatives must distinguish between vitamin A in the truest sense, i.e. retinol, and retinoic acid and its synthetic derivatives. Just as no single description is universally applicable to the mode of action of vitamin A derivatives, so too do their toxic effects defy generalization. The recommendation made in 1982 by IUPAC [Eur. J. Biochem., 129 (1989) 1] to designate all derivatives with the typical structure of the vitamin as being retinoids may be chemically logical and correct but, when it comes to describing the effects and side-effects of vitamin A derivatives, it leads to misunderstandings. Retinol, which is fre…