Newswise, April 5, 2016 — Low levels of total
vitamin D and bioavailable vitamin D can help predict a person’s risk of major
adverse cardiovascular events such as a heart attack, stroke, heart failure or
death, according to a first-of-its-kind study from the Intermountain Medical
Center Heart Institute in Salt Lake City.
“Our study found that low levels of both total
vitamin D and bioavailable vitamin D appear to be associated with poor
cardiovascular outcomes,” said lead author Heidi May, PhD, MSPH, a
cardiovascular epidemiologist with the Intermountain Medical Center Heart
Institute.
The study evaluated 4,200 participants between the
ages of 52 and 76. A quarter of the study participants were diabetic and 70
percent had coronary artery disease.
Clinicians tested participants’ vitamin D metabolite
levels, which included components of vitamin D that are formed during
metabolism, to determine the metabolites’ association with future major adverse
cardiovascular events. Bioavailable vitamin D results from vitamin D being
absorbed into the blood stream without binding to surrounding proteins.
During metabolism, only 10–15 percent of total
vitamin D is available in the body to act on target cells, as most are bound to
vitamin D binding proteins.
Therefore, evaluating whether the proportion of
vitamin D that can be used may be important, as only unbound vitamin D, such as
bioavailable vitamin D, is available to act on target cells.
The study tested many different types of vitamin D,
but found that measuring total vitamin D and bioavailable vitamin D were the
most accurate in predicting harmful cardiovascular events.
“This study is the first research that evaluates the
association of vitamin D metabolites with cardiovascular events,” said Dr. May.
“And evaluating usable vitamin D could mean the difference on the amount of
vitamin D prescribed, if it’s prescribed at all.”
The study expands on the results of several
observational studies, including some performed at Intermountain Healthcare,
but researchers recommend conducting more studies on non-Caucasian populations
because past research shows vitamin D metabolites affect Caucasian and
non-Caucasian races differently.
Other members of the Intermountain Medical Center
Heart Institute research team included Oxana Galenko, PhD, John F. Carlquist,
PhD, Lindell K. Weaver, MD, Stacey Knight, PhD, Tyler Barker, PhD, and Brent J.
Muhlestein, MD.
Intermountain Medical Center is the flagship
facility for the Intermountain Healthcare system, which is based in Salt Lake
City.
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