4.5 Article

Potential impact of the steroid hormone, vitamin D, on the vasculature

Journal

AMERICAN HEART JOURNAL
Volume 239, Issue -, Pages 147-153

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ahj.2021.05.012

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Aging
  2. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health [AG061586, HL137647, HL151391]

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The role of vitamin D in the cardiovascular system is complex, involving gene regulation and metabolic processes. Vitamin D can be considered a steroid hormone, produced in response to ultraviolet light. The source of vitamin D, whether from diet or sunlight, impacts its distribution and effects on vascular disease.
The role of vitamin D in the cardiovascular system is complex because it regulates expression of genes involved in diverse metabolic processes. Although referred to as a vitamin, it is more accurately considered a steroid hormone, because it is produced endogenously in the presence of ultraviolet light. It occurs as a series of sequentially activated forms, here referred to as vitamin D-hormones. A little-known phenomenon, based on pre-clinical data, is that its biodistribution and potential effects on vascular disease likely depend on whether it is derived from diet or sunlight. Diet-derived vitamin D-hormones are carried in the blood, at least in part, in chylomicrons and lipoprotein particles, including low-density lipoprotein. Since low-density lipoprotein is known to accumulate in the artery wall and atherosclerotic plaque, diet-derived vitamin D-hormones may also collect there, and possibly promote the osteochondrogenic mineralization associated with plaque. Also, little known is the fact that the body stores vitamin D-hormones in adipose tissue with a half-life on the order of months, raising doubts about whether the use of the term daily requirement is appropriate. Cardiovascular effects of vitamin D-hormones are controversial, and risk appears to increase with both low and high blood levels. Since low serum vitamin D-hormone concentration is reportedly associated with increased cardiovascular and orthopedic risk, oral supplementation is widely used, often together with calcium supplements. However, meta-analyses show that oral vitamin D-hormone supplementation does not protect against cardiovascular events, findings that are also supported by a randomized controlled trial. These considerations suggest that prevalent recommendations for vitamin D-hormone supplementation for the purpose of cardiovascular protection should be carefully reconsidered.

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