Vitamin Deficiency
Basics
Basics
Basics
Description
Description
Description
- Vitamins are essential micronutrients required for normal metabolism, growth, and development.
- Vitamin supplementation in food products, adequate food security, and availability of supplements make vitamin deficiencies less common in developed countries. Certain populations are at increased risk.
- Toxicity is rare for water-soluble vitamins. It is possible for fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K).
Epidemiology
Epidemiology
Epidemiology
Incidence
- Higher incidence seen in geriatric patients, pregnant women, exclusively breastfed infants, individuals with highly restricted diets or certain chronic disease states
- True incidence is unknown because most vitamin deficiencies are asymptomatic.
Prevalence
- Varies by age groups, comorbid conditions, geography, and setting (i.e., urban, rural)
- The prevalence of vitamin B12 deficiency is ~6% in patients <60 years old and increases to ~20% after the age of 60 years (1).
- Vitamin D deficiency prevalence is increased in individuals with darker skin pigmentation, obesity, low dietary intake of vitamin D, or low sunlight exposure. This deficiency is seen in ~5% of the general population, with non-Hispanic Blacks having the highest prevalence.
Etiology and Pathophysiology
Etiology and Pathophysiology
Etiology and Pathophysiology
- Deficiency usually develops from one of five mechanisms: reduced intake, diminished absorption, increased use, increased demand, increased demand or increased excretion
- Chronic disease states: HIV, malabsorption (i.e., celiac sprue, short bowel syndrome), chronic liver and kidney disease, alcoholism, malignancies, pernicious anemia, inborn errors of metabolism
- Bariatric surgeries: gastric bypass, gastrectomy, small or large bowel resection
- Certain drugs predispose to vitamin deficiencies: prednisone, phenytoin, isoniazid, protease inhibitors, methotrexate, phenobarbital, alcohol, nitrous oxide, H2 receptor antagonists, metformin, colchicine, cholestyramine, 5-fluorouracil, 6-mercaptopurine, azathioprine, chloramphenicol, proton pump inhibitors, chronically used antibiotics, penicillamine, hydralazine
- Malnutrition, imbalanced nutrition, obesity, fad diets, extreme vegetarianism, total parenteral nutrition, bulimia/anorexia, other eating disorders, parasitic infection
Genetics
- Cystic fibrosis
- Hartnup disease, A-β-lipoproteinemia
- Rare genetic predisposition
- Autoimmune disease (i.e., pernicious anemia)
- Congenital enzyme deficiencies (i.e., biotinidase or holocarboxylase synthetase deficiency)
- Transcobalamin II deficiency
- Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency (AVED)
Risk Factors
Risk Factors
Risk Factors
Poverty, malnutrition, chronic excessive alcohol intake, chronic disease states, advanced age, dietary restrictions, bariatric surgery, certain medications, and exclusively breastfed infants
General Prevention
General Prevention
General Prevention
- Ingesting large and varied amounts of vitamin supplements increases risk of toxicity and drug–drug interactions and is not recommended.
- Antioxidant supplements have not been shown to impact cancer incidence; increased mortality risk seen in some studies
- Avoid restrictive diets.
- USPSTF recommends against low-dose supplementation with vitamin D (<400 IU) and calcium (<1,000 mg) to reduce fracture risk in community-dwelling postmenopausal women.
- USPSTF concludes current evidence is insufficient to assess benefits and harms of daily supplementation with doses >400 IU of vitamin D and >1000 mg of calcium for primary prevention of fractures in:
- Community-dwelling, postmenopausal women
- Men and premenopausal women
- Note: The above recommendations are not applicable if there is a history of osteoporotic fractures, increased risk for falls or diagnosis of osteoporosis, or vitamin D deficiency.
USPSTF recommends all women planning or capable of pregnancy take a daily supplement containing 0.4 to 0.8 mg of
folic acid (
2)[
A].
- USPSTF recommends against using β-carotene or vitamin E supplements for the prevention of cardiovascular disease or cancer.
- Adults without regular, effective sun exposure year round should consume 600 to 800 IU/day of vitamin D3. Elderly confined indoors and other high-risk groups may require higher doses (800 to 1,000 IU/day).
- All infants should receive 400 IU/day of vitamin D soon after birth if exclusively or partially breastfed.
Commonly Associated Conditions
Commonly Associated Conditions
Commonly Associated Conditions
Anemia, neuropathies, dermatitis, visual disturbances
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