EN | UA
EN | UA

Help Support

Back

Effects of high doses of vitamin D supplementation in people with psoriasis

Psoriasis Psoriasis
Psoriasis Psoriasis

This study aimed to determine impact of elevated doses of vitamin D on parameters of homocysteine metabolism and cytokines in the serum of people diagnosed with psoriasis.

 

See All

Key take away

In people having plaque psoriasis, a three-month supplementation with elevated doses of vitamin D appears to be beneficial for alleviating systemic inflammation.

Background

This study aimed to determine impact of elevated doses of vitamin D on parameters of homocysteine metabolism and cytokines in the serum of people diagnosed with psoriasis.

 

Method

In this prospective clinical study, 40 people (average age 47.13 ± 15.10 years) with psoriasis who had vitamin D deficiency (< 75 nmol/L) were recruited. For 3 months, participants were given 5000 IU/day vitamin D supplementation. At the baseline and at follow up (three months), the clinical and biochemical parameters were estimated. With the aid of psoriasis area severity index (PASI) score, the severity of clinical features was examined.

Result

Vitamin D supplementation led to remarkable improvements in the severity of clinical features with most of the people (n = 25 or 62.5%) exhibiting only mild clinical form of the disease. Following 12 weeks of intervention, a considerable rise in the serum levels of vitamin D and vitamin B12 and a drop in the serum levels of homocysteine and folate were noted when compared to the levels estimated at baseline, as shown in Table 1:

Elevated doses of vitamin D supplementation resulted in a considerable drop in the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines (Interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin [IL]-1β, IL-17, IL-8, IL-6) and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein. Furthermore, it up-regulated the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-5, IL-10).

Conclusion

Following three months of vitamin D supplementation, the majority of people attained optimal vitamin D and vitamin B12 concentrations and this effect correlated with clinical improvements in skin lesions, as evaluated by reduced PASI scores.

Source:

Biomolecules

Article:

The Effect of Three-Month Vitamin D Supplementation on the Levels of Homocysteine Metabolism Markers and Inflammatory Cytokines in Sera of Psoriatic Patients

Authors:

Alma Prtina et al.

Comments (0)

You want to delete this comment? Please mention comment Invalid Text Content Text Content cannot me more than 1000 Something Went Wrong Cancel Confirm Confirm Delete Hide Replies View Replies View Replies ru en
Try: