Himbert Caroline, Ose Jennifer, Delphan Mahmoud, Ulrich Cornelia M
Huntsman Cancer Institute, Population Sciences, Salt Lake City, UT; Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Huntsman Cancer Institute, Population Sciences, Salt Lake City, UT; Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT.
Nutr Res. 2017 Feb;38:13-26. doi: 10.1016/j.nutres.2016.12.004. Epub 2016 Dec 8.
Obesity is a major global health problem and has been associated with vitamin D deficiency. Intentional weight loss may alter vitamin D status and, conversely, vitamin D supplementation has been hypothesized to aid in weight loss. A systematic literature search in PubMed/Medline identified 3173 articles of which 37 studies (randomized controlled trials (RCT) [n=17], non-RCTs [n=20]) are summarized as effect of: (I) diet-induced weight loss on vitamin D status (n=7), (II) vitamin D supplementation on diet-induced weight loss (n=11), (III) surgery-induced weight loss on vitamin D status (n=15), and (IV) vitamin D supplementation after surgery-induced weight loss on vitamin D status (n=5). While all studies on the effect of diet-induced weight loss on vitamin D status have consistently reported increased vitamin D levels, the targeted percentage of weight loss that is necessary for an increase has varied between 5% and >10%. N=11 RCTs testing the effect of vitamin D supplementation observe that vitamin D supplementation does not result in increased weight loss, but may affect body fat loss. Vitamin D deficiency and subsequent hyperparathyroidism have been detected in post-surgery patients, and there is evidence that vitamin D supplementation improves these post-surgery complications. We review the current evidence addressing the role of vitamin D status and supplementation in diet- and surgery-induced weight loss. Subsequently, we highlight gaps in current research and suggest directions for future research including differences in vitamin D supplementation dosages, indoor vs. outdoor exercise, and the assessment of vitamin D status in different body pools.
肥胖是一个主要的全球健康问题,并且与维生素D缺乏有关。有意减肥可能会改变维生素D状态,相反,补充维生素D被认为有助于减肥。在PubMed/Medline上进行的系统文献检索共识别出3173篇文章,其中37项研究(随机对照试验(RCT)[n = 17],非随机对照试验[n = 20])被总结为以下方面的影响:(I)饮食诱导的体重减轻对维生素D状态的影响(n = 7),(II)补充维生素D对饮食诱导的体重减轻的影响(n = 11),(III)手术诱导的体重减轻对维生素D状态的影响(n = 15),以及(IV)手术诱导的体重减轻后补充维生素D对维生素D状态的影响(n = 5)。虽然所有关于饮食诱导的体重减轻对维生素D状态影响的研究都一致报告维生素D水平升高,但体重增加所需的目标减肥百分比在5%至>10%之间有所不同。11项测试补充维生素D效果的随机对照试验观察到,补充维生素D不会导致体重减轻增加,但可能会影响体脂减少。在术后患者中检测到维生素D缺乏及随后的甲状旁腺功能亢进,并且有证据表明补充维生素D可改善这些术后并发症。我们综述了当前关于维生素D状态及补充在饮食和手术诱导的体重减轻中作用的证据。随后,我们强调了当前研究中的差距,并提出了未来研究的方向,包括维生素D补充剂量的差异、室内与室外运动,以及不同身体部位维生素D状态的评估。