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Vitamin D treatment options in physician‘s everday practice Author: Höck Anna Dorothea MD Internal Medicine and Psychotherapy Sunlight is the natural source of vitamin D Why is deficiency of vitamin D3 so frequent: • Preference of indoor works in western life style • Sun protectors • Living in an area more than 40 degrees beyond equatorial latitude • Living in crowded cities with huge buildings Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 2 Immune-, nervous-, endocrine-, cardio-vascular system Calcium-phosphate metabolism by a bowel-kidney-bonebrain-adipocyte axis Tissue and cell-tissue cross-talk Cell cycle, proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis Energy metabolism Cell signal transduction Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 3 Vitamin D is activated to 1,25(OH)2D3 by CYP27B1 This active vitamin D behaves like other steroid hormones (e.g., cortisol, estrogen, thyroid hormone) By binding to a special steroid receptor, named „vitamin D binding receptor“ (VDR) it is able to act as a transcription factor to induce, repress or modulate gene expression However, non genomic actions are known as well (signal transducing actions) which augment the transactivation processes Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 4 My first experiences in 1993: A patient with severe unexplainable fatigue, progressive sleeping disorder, and finally nearly complete hair loss Initial diagnosis by 4 physicians: depression However: psychotherapy did not work Finally revised diagnosis: severe vitamin D deficiency with secondary hyperparathyroidism [25OHD3: 4 ng/ml (10nmol/L)] Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 5 Therapy with 10,000 IU (250 mcg)/d 25-hydroxycholecalciferol Clinically: initially striking recovery from fatigue and malaise However: tríal to treat with 20,000 IU (500 mcg)/d resulted in bone pains In spite of continuous vitamin D substitution, hair loss persisted Muscle cramps, anxiety, and persisting difficulty concentrating developed. Hence mineral therapy was initiated (potassium, magnesium, phosphate, citrate). Result: hair loss turned out to be reversible! Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 6 Why did I avoid calcium supplementation? My great fear: to induce kidney stones in presence of elevated parathormone My consideration: sufficient vitamin D induces sufficient calcium resorption (when consuming milk products) My nightmare: milk-alkali syndrome ! My knowledge now: more than 4,000 mg calcium/d are able to induce milk-alkali syndrome Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 7 However: the follow up of case histories tought me some lessons Applied doses: This patient developed a fibromyalgia-like syndrome in spite of efficient vitamin D substitution (25OHD3 about 60 ng/ml) I learned to view fatigue as a leading symptom and treated it with vitamin D Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 slight to moderate fatigue: 5,000 IU (125 mcg)/d severe fatigue: 10,000 IU (250 mcg)/d 8 Fatigue and functional symptoms were combined and graded. Treatment results dependent on grade. Mild to moderate: All grades: better results when adding base powder. Higher doses, better results! mostly: very successful treatment results. However, in some cases: worsened sleeping disorder, or hyperexcitability Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 Severe: mixed results! Some patients: No response! 9 This introduced me into the calcium problem Calcium and phosphate are stored in bone as hydroxyapatite Serum calcium level is strictly controlled Free calcium is in the cell a second messenger Calcium binds to proteins altering structure and function (channels, receptors, enzymes, adapters, storage proteins) Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 10 The calcium replete and deplete state hypothesis • CaR active? • FGF23/Klotho active Replete Deplete • CaR inactive? No PTH-suppression • Bone resorption by PTH + inflammatory cytokines Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 11 The controversy about calcium Other persuasions: • No calcium, but high dose vitamin D with rapid saturation to optimal 25OHD3-level. Von Helden, Vitamin Delta Research Group, Germany • 25OH more than 18 ng/ml (43nmol/L) and 800 mg calcium/d: lowest PTH. • 25OH more than 18 ng/ml (43nmol/L) and 1200 mg calcium: PTH higher Steingrimsdottir L, et al, JAMA 2005;294(18):2336-41 Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 12 However: There is a daily calcium loss Bowel: 300 - 1000 mg Kidney: 150 - 300 mg Sweat: up to 1500 mg Daily bone exchange: 250-500 mg Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 13 What I learned as well: These depletions all look very much the same •Calcium •Phosphate •Vitamin D3 •Other minerals Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 14 The essentials of disease progression Chronic (idiopathic) fatigue Chronic fatigue syndrome Fibromyalgia Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 Clear-cut and well defined diseases 15 My fibromyalgia hypothesis Resulting from long-standing vitamin Ddeficiency? „rickets“ of the adults? Very often: severe life events since youth Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 16 My hypothesis about MCS Severe calcium loss essential for disease? Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 17 My hypothesis about chronic fatigue syndrome Often no vitamin D/calcium deficiency in childhood, therefore in the beginning of life excellent performance Most people disclose a very tough personality By excessive strain and sun deprivation: very severe, though more acute vitamin D and calcium deficiency Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 Severe immune dysfunction: persistent (opportunistic?) infection? 18 Why opportunistic infections? Vitamin D is an important immune regulator Enforces innate immunity (pathogens become killed) Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 Modulates adaptive immunity towards immune tolerance 19 Is vitamin D useful in practice? Nearly everyone complains about fatigue Inexpensive Combination possible with nearly all „state of the art“-therapies Expensive „block buster-therapy“ evitable or better dose/response? Patients are highly motivated not to be fatigued Patients get their self esteem back Psychotherapy is often no longer necessary Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 20 These patients need vitamin D The everyday patient: Prevention Those with remitting infectious disorders Those with fatigue and functional disorders Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 Those with mild, moderate or severe chronic disease conditions 21 Of interest: Horizontal and vertical disease history Horizontal: the almost fixed combination between fatigue and functional disorders. Vertical: The age-specific picture of vitamin D deficiency. The slow progression from dysfunction to somatic disease. Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 22 The three columns of disease Energy deficit • Best seen in nervous system or in muscle force Dysfunction • Headache • Sleep disorder • Organ (heart, bowel, bladder, muscles;) and system dysfunction (autonomous nervous-, immune-, endocrine-, cardiovascular-, gastroenteral- , reproductive-) • Lowered detoxification • Pains • Very typical: sweats, thirst, hunger intolerance Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 Defined diseases • Behaviour abnormalities • Chronic infections • Thyroid and ovary disease • Muskuloskeletal disease and osteopenia • Cardiovascular • Cancer • Metabolic disease • Immune or connective tissue disease • Organ failure • Osteoporosis and frailty 23 Treatment options What is the optimal 25 OHD3 level? How to find the optimal vitamin D treatment dose? Which compound? Calcium Yes or No? Basic compounds? Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 24 The optimal 25OHD3 levels (1) 30 ng/ml = 80 nMol/L 40 ng/ml = 100 nMol/L (Vieth R, Lips P, Heaney RP, Grant WB, Giovannucci E, Hollis BW, Hollick MF, Norman AW, many others) 60 – 80 ng/ml = 150 – 200 nMol/L (Gominak S, Garland CF) (Grant WB, Pro Biophy Mol Biol 2009) Groups (IARC and IOM) not wishing that 95% of the population believe that they are in health risk. Therefore: Correction of the desired 25OHD3 level down to 20 ng/ml (50 nMol/L) Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 25 The optimal vitamin D dose (2) 4,000 IU = 100 mcg/day 2000 IU = 50 mcg/day (upper limit of daily allowance: NHI) Patients reached a steady state (over 3 months) Vieth R, 2006 Own clinical observations in severe cases: 10,000 IU = 250 mcg/day 1-3 years. When reaching 100 ng/ml = 250 nMol/L, maintainance dose of 5,000 IU = 125 mcg/day (lifelong?) Later own experience (even better working): 3000 - 5000 IU = 75 - 125 mcg/day and high dose calcium (1000 – 1800 mg elementary calcium/day Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 26 However, there seem to exist pitfalls in therapy effectiveness: Chronic NFkB activation is able to induce compromised vitamin D actions • Pathogens • Chronic inflammatory stress • Chronic stress of variant origin Farmer PK, et al. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 2000; 279(1):E213-20. Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 27 Possible way out: ultra-high dose cholecalciferol may overcome treatment resistance Raimund von Helden, Delta Research Group: • 40,000 IU (1,000 mcg)/d) or 100,000 IU (2,500 mcg/d) • His arguments: 100,000 IU raise 25OHD3 about 10 ng/ml Each 10 kg body weight need additional 100,000 IU Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 28 Which compound? Alfacalcidol is usually used in renal insufficiency In cancer vitamin D analogs with noncalcemic actions might become a key treatment option Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 29 Calcium Yes or No? „Yes“ in most cases: Aim: Stop of proinflammation „No“ (or with great caution): Hypercalciuria Granulomatous disease Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 30 The safe range of calcium/creatinine ratio 25OHD3 level Up to 25OHD3 levels of 100 ng/ml or 250 nmol/L ratio of urine calcium/creatinine (mmol/L: mmol/L) remains about 0.4. Beyond 100 ng/ml: slow rise! Toxic ratio: 1 or higher Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 31 Two possible causes of hypercalciuria: Severe calcium deficiency with paradoxical hypercalciuria (Altered set point of CaR?) Severe phosphate deficiency with hypercalciuria (Renal tubular acidosis?) Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 32 Possible solutions against aquired forms of hypercalciuria? Fractionated low single dose calcium without reducing the daily supplementation Calcium supplementation by basic powders Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 33 An important absolute contraindication! Mutations in CYP24A1 leading to idiopathic infantile Hypercalcemia Schlingmann KP, et al. N Engl J Med 2011;365(5):410-21. 34 Why basic powders: Important observation: Reduction of pains Some patients reported positive effects by addional magnesium ingestion In particular, in MCS and CFS additional phosphate supplementation seemed to be effective Untreated people showed variable reductions of potassium, calcium or magnesium serum levels Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 35 Contraindications Absolute: Basic powder in case of terminal renal insufficiency Relative: Granulomatous disease (hypercalcemia possible, reversible by cortisol) CaR hyperactivating mutations? (hypercalciuria) Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 36 Your take-home messages (1) Vitamin D, in combination with calcium/base powders, is indicated in most patient you treat Minor illness will fully disappear However: Recurrence is the rule when stopping supplementation Severe disease with organic manifestations mostly need classical drug therapy, but by combining this with vitamin D and minerals renders therapy more effective Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 37 Your take-home message (3) Remember: vitamin D deficiency itself can induce renal functional impairment with increased loss of calcium and phosphate By treating with vitamin D, renal impairment can resolve Believe your patients. Why should they lie? Be open to find a connection between life events, working load and disease by knowledge about the impact of concurring vitamin D deficiency and the resulting calcium deficits Speech Dr. Hoeck. September 18th, 2011 39