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Vitamin D and autoimmunity: is vitamin D status an environmental factor affecting autoimmune disease prevalence?

M T Cantorna
Review Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.) 2000 281 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Review
Población
diabetes patients
Intervención
Vitamin D and autoimmunity: is vitamin D status an environmental factor affecting autoimmune disease prevalence? None
Comparador
None
Resultado primario
immune function
Dirección del efecto
Mixed
Riesgo de sesgo
Unclear

Abstract

The environment in which the encounter of antigen with the immune system occurs determines whether tolerance, infectious immunity, or autoimmunity results. Geographical areas with low supplies of vitamin D (for example Scandinavia) correlate with regions with high incidences of multiple sclerosis, arthritis, and diabetes. The active form of vitamin D has been shown to suppress the development of autoimmunity in experimental animal models. Furthermore, vitamin D deficiency increases the severity of at least experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (mouse multiple sclerosis). Targets for vitamin D in the immune system have been identified, and the mechanisms of vitamin D-mediated immunoregulation are beginning to be understood. This review discusses the possibility that vitamin D status is an environmental factor, which by shaping the immune system affects the prevalence rate for autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis, arthritis, and juvenile diabetes.

TL;DR

The possibility that vitamin D status is an environmental factor, which by shaping the immune system affects the prevalence rate for autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis, arthritis, and juvenile diabetes is discussed.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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