There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
Obesity is associated with vitamin D insufficiency and secondary hyperparathyroidism.
This study assessed whether obesity alters the cutaneous production of vitamin D(3)
(cholecalciferol) or the intestinal absorption of vitamin D(2) (ergocalciferol).
Healthy, white, obese [body mass index (BMI; in kg/m(2)) > or = 30] and matched lean
control subjects (BMI </= 25) received either whole-body ultraviolet radiation or
a pharmacologic dose of vitamin D(2) orally.
Obese subjects had significantly lower basal 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations and
higher parathyroid hormone concentrations than did age-matched control subjects. Evaluation
of blood vitamin D(3) concentrations 24 h after whole-body irradiation showed that
the incremental increase in vitamin D(3) was 57% lower in obese than in nonobese subjects.
The content of the vitamin D(3) precursor 7-dehydrocholesterol in the skin of obese
and nonobese subjects did not differ significantly between groups nor did its conversion
to previtamin D(3) after irradiation in vitro. The obese and nonobese subjects received
an oral dose of 50000 IU (1.25 mg) vitamin D(2). BMI was inversely correlated with
serum vitamin D(3) concentrations after irradiation (r = -0.55, P: = 0.003) and with
peak serum vitamin D(2) concentrations after vitamin D(2) intake (r = -0.56, P: =
0.007).
Obesity-associated vitamin D insufficiency is likely due to the decreased bioavailability
of vitamin D(3) from cutaneous and dietary sources because of its deposition in body
fat compartments.
[1
]From the Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield; Jefferson Medical
College, Philadelphia; and the Boston University Medical Center.