Vitamin D deficiency and chronic kidney disease risk: cause or merely association?

McCarron and Drueke present an editorial on risk factors of vitamin D deficiency and chronic kidney disease (CKD). One aspect of CKD is unquestioned, whether it is early renal impairment or once end-stage disease ensues, vitamin D concentrations are inadequate to maintain optimal mineral balance. In...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of clinical nutrition 2018-12, Vol.108 (6), p.1164-1165
Hauptverfasser: McCarron, David A, Drueke, Tilman B
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creator McCarron, David A
Drueke, Tilman B
description McCarron and Drueke present an editorial on risk factors of vitamin D deficiency and chronic kidney disease (CKD). One aspect of CKD is unquestioned, whether it is early renal impairment or once end-stage disease ensues, vitamin D concentrations are inadequate to maintain optimal mineral balance. In healthy subjects, the role of vitamin D in disease prevention runs the gamut of cancer to diabetes, with only bone health firmly established. Even its essential role in bone health is dependent on sufficient calcium intake.The interest in vitamin D's possible role in health maintenance is clouded by the expansive use of measuring serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentrations in the healthy population combined with the debate as to what constitutes a normal serum concentration.
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subjects Bone cancer
Calcium
Cancer
Diabetes mellitus
Dietary minerals
End-stage renal disease
Health risks
Humans
Kidney
Kidney diseases
Kidneys
Nutrient deficiency
Renal function
Renal Insufficiency, Chronic
Risk analysis
Risk Factors
Vitamin D
Vitamin D Deficiency
Vitamin deficiency
title Vitamin D deficiency and chronic kidney disease risk: cause or merely association?
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