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Vitamin D, the gut microbiome and inflammatory bowel disease.

Seyed-Amir Tabatabaeizadeh, Niayesh Tafazoli, Gordon A Ferns, Amir Avan, Majid Ghayour-Mobarhan
Review Journal of research in medical sciences : the official journal of Isfahan University of Medical Sciences 2018 48 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Study Type
Review
Population
IBD patients
Intervention
Vitamin D, the gut microbiome and inflammatory bowel disease. None
Comparator
None
Primary Outcome
GI inflammation and microbiome modulation
Effect Direction
Mixed
Risk of Bias
Unclear

Abstract

Vitamin D has an important role in bone metabolism but recently has been recognized as an immunoregulator, and this has led to investigations on the effect of Vitamin D supplementation in various autoimmune diseases and its anti-inflammatory effects. There is some evidence that Vitamin D can regulate gastrointestinal inflammation. In addition, previous studies have shown that Vitamin D can affect the gut microbiome. The aim of this review is to evaluate the effect of Vitamin D on inflammatory processes, especially its relation to the inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and gut microbiome. There is some evidence that Vitamin D can regulate gastrointestinal inflammation, with epidemiological studies showing that individuals with higher serum Vitamin D have a lower incidence of IBD, particularly Crohn's disease. Vitamin D changes transcription of cathelicidin and DEFB4 (defensin, beta 4) that can affect the gut microbiome. Several cell types of the immune system express Vitamin D receptor, and hence the use of Vitamin D in immune regulation has some potential. Furthermore, Vitamin D deficiency leads to dysbiosis of gut microbiome and reported to cause severe colitis. Vitamin D supplementation is low cost and available and can be a therapeutic option.

TL;DR

The aim of this review is to evaluate the effect of Vitamin D on inflammatory processes, especially its relation to the inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and gut microbiome.

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