Fat Soluble Vitamins Flashcards
Functions and source of Vitamin A
Essential for retinal signaling, maintenance of conjunctival membranes, and cornea; some function in immune regulation
Sources: Pre-formed Vitamin A (retinol) in liver, dairy, egg yolks, fish oil
Precursors (beta carotene) in carrots, spinach, broccoli, pumpkin
Vitamin A Deficiency
Night blindness
Xeropthalmia (corneal dryness)
Bitot’s spots - white, keratinized spots on the conjunctival membrane
Immune deficiency - especially in children
Vitamin A Toxicity
Only with pre-formed retinol (not beta carotene precursors)
Increased intracranial pressure, vomiting, headache
Bone pain, fractures, osteoporosis
Liver damage
Birth defects
Vitamin D Function
Maintains intracellular & extracellular [Ca2+] by
stimulating absorption of Ca2+ and P from the intestine, mobilization from bone, and renal reabsorption
Vitamin D Metabolism
Dehydrocholesterol in skin is converted to cholecalciferol (D3) by UV light
D3 from the skin enters circulation and travels to the liver, where it is hydroxylated to 25-OH-D; 25-OH-D travels to the kidney where it is hyroxylated to 1,25-(OH)-D (i.e. calcitriol - this is the active form)
Vitamin D Deficiency
Childhood Rickets - failure of cartilage calcification; presents with bowed legs, widened metaphyses (wrists), bone pain, fractures, ‘rachitic rosary’
Adult osteoporosis
Risk: Lack of sunshine exposure, low dietary intake, fat malabsorption, dark skin, obesity, liver or renal disease
Evaluation of Vitamin D Levels
Serum 25(OH) reflects body stores
Decreased serum Ca2+ and P
Elevated Alk Phos
Elevated PTH
Sources of Vitamin D
D3 from animal sources - fish oil, egg yolk, fortified milk
D2 from plant sources (algae)
Vitamin E Function and Sources
Anti-oxidant, cell membrane stabilizer
Sources: Vegetable oils, wheat germ
Vitamin E Deficiency
Irreversible neurologic degeneration - decreased DTRs, ataxia, neuropathy, opthalmoplegia, loss of position / vibration sense
Hemolytic anemia
Vitamin E Toxicity
Coagulopathy - very large doses inhibit Vitamin K dependent factors
(Rare)
Vitamin D Toxicity
Hypercalcemia - nephrocalcinosis, vascular and soft tissue calcinosis
Seizures
Vitamin K function and sources
Essential for carboxylation of coagulation proteins - Factors II, VII, IX, X
Sources: Leafy vegetables, fruits, seeds; synthesized by intestinal bacteria
Vitamin K Deficiency
Prolonged coagulation time; hemorrhagic bleeding into skin (purpura), GI tract, CNS
Risk increased in newborns due to poor placental transport and sterile gut; risk also increased with chronic antibiotic use
Vitamin D supplementation recommendations
400 IU/day to all breastfed infants until receiving 500ml/day of fortified formula or milk