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Active clinical trials for "Vitamin D Deficiency"

Results 21-30 of 697

The Effect of Preoperative Oral Dexamethasone Supplementation on the Outcome of Thyroidectomised...

HypocalcemiaVitamin D Deficiency5 more

Glucocorticoids are well known for their analgesic, anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory and anti-emetic effects. Recovery time after thyroid surgery may depend on several factors, such as postoperative pain, nausea and vomiting, postoperative sore throat, voice disorders and symptomatic hypocalcaemia (low serum calcium level). However, there is little information in the literature about the preventive use of glucocorticosteroids in patients undergoing thyroid surgery. The aim of the study is to evaluate the clinical impact of preoperative oral dexamethasone supplementation on the surgical outcome in patients with multinodular goiter undergoing total thyroidectomy. Patients will be assigned to the supplementation group and the placebo group. In the supplementation group 8mg of dexamethasone will be administered orally one hour before surgery. In the postoperative period, the frequency and intensity of pain, nausea, vomiting, sore throat and hoarseness will be assessed. The incidence of symptoms of hypocalcaemia will also be evaluted. Preoperative and postoperative levels of vitamin D, cytokines, acute phase proteins and substances related to calcium metabolism will be measured in the blood. Cytokines levels in drainage fluid will also be assessed. The main hypothesis of the study is that in patients with supplementation postoperative discomfort and decrease in serum calcium and parathormone level and hypocalcemic symptoms will be less severe and the levels of proinflammatory substances will be decreased.

Recruiting43 enrollment criteria

Effect of Vitamin D Status and Repletion on Postoperative Total Joint Arthroplasty Complications...

Hip ArthropathyKnee Arthropathy1 more

Vitamin D status has been shown to have an effect on post-operative outcomes in total joint arthroplasty. The goal of this study is to determine if pre-operative supplementation and correction of Vitamin D deficiency can reduce postoperative complications.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Prevention of Postoperative Hypocalcemia of Oral Vitamin D Supplementation Before Total Thyroidectomy...

Total ThyroidectomyHypocalcemia1 more

The hypocalcemia after total thyroidectomy is one of common surgical complications. It may be asymptomatic, but patients can complain of dysfunction around the mouth or extremities, stiffness or convulsion in severe cases. The incidence of transient hypocalcemia was 6.9-46%, and permanent hypocalcemia was reported to be 0.4-33%. It has been reported that the incidence of hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy is high when the difference in blood levels of parathyroid hormone and vitamin D is large before and after surgery. Therefore, it is a very important task to study the effect of using vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol), which has a better effect on the human body, on the prevention of hypocalcemia after total thyroidectomy with a long follow-up period after surgery. The department of surgery in Seoul National University Hospital intends to analyze the preventive effect "D-mac 30,000 IU" on postoperative hypocalcemia and safety of 'D-mac 30,000 IU" through a prospective randomized clinical trial. The incidence of postoperative hypocalcemia of the group taking orally taking vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) before surgery will be compared with that of the group not taking vitamin D3 before surgery. Patients who are enrolled in this RCT are allocated to the case group and the control group. Patients in the case group are taking 30,000 IU of vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) orally, and patients in the control group are not taking any drugs. Primary endpoint of this study is to evaluate the incidence of hypocalcemia. And secondary endpoints are to evaluate the recovery duration from postoperative hypocalcemia and the risk factors for postoperative hypocalcemia.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria

PREDIN: Pregnancy and Vitamin D Intervention Study

Vitamin D DeficiencyVitamin D3 Deficiency1 more

Vitamin D deficiency is common among certain risk groups in Sweden, and occurs approximately in every tenth pregnant woman.The aim of the randomized double-blind controlled trial Pregnancy vitamin D intervention (PREDIN) is to investigate the dose of vitamin D supplementation required in achieving vitamin D sufficiency (25OHD ≥50 nmol/l) in pregnant women at risk of vitamin D deficiency. In addition, the investigators aim to examine if the overall vitamin D status and vitamin D intake have increased since the expanded vitamin D fortification program was initiated in year 2020.

Enrolling by invitation5 enrollment criteria

Vitamin D in School Children

Vitamin D DeficiencyMusculoskeletal Diseases2 more

The primary purpose of this study it to investigate total circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) in school children (aged 4-11years) in Northern Ireland; thereby establishing the prevalence of vitamin D status (deficiency, insufficiency, and sufficiency (SACN 2016)) in this cohort. Additionally, the study aims to determine if 10µg/day vitamin D3 supplementation over 12 weeks maintains vitamin D status. This area of research is lacking in the quality of prospective studies. While previous literature has focused on the prevalence of vitamin D status in adults, there is a paucity of data available for children. This study will add to the existing knowledge and provide more specific analysis for children. Hypothesis 1: Increase in vitamin D concentrations will be associated with an improvement in health outcomes including anthropometric measurements, musculoskeletal outcomes, markers of inflammation, nutritional status and bone turnover, lipid profiles, cognitive function, and handgrip strength.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Effects of Vitamin D-Enriched Mushrooms on Vitamin D Status and Immune Function and Inflammatory...

Vitamin D Deficiency

We propose to assess the effects of including vitamin D-enriched mushrooms as part of participants' usual eating pattern primarily on 25(OH) vitamin D2 status and secondarily on immune function and inflammatory status.

Recruiting40 enrollment criteria

Effect of Supplementation With ω-3 Fatty Acids, Vitamin D and Calcium in Patients With Acute Lymphoblastic...

Acute Lymphoblastic LeukemiaVitamin d Deficiency

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of supplementation with Omega 3, Vitamin D and Calcium, in a cohort of children with ALL undergoing treatment and compare changes in the concentrations of biomarkers of bone resorption (TRAP5b, CTX, and RANKL), the RANKL/OPG ratio, and biomarkers of bone formation (BALP, OC, PINP, PICP and OPG) after 6 and 12 weeks of supplementation.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

The Genetic Effects on Vitamin D Supplementation

Vitamin D Deficiency

Vitamin D is essential for skeletal growth and bone health, deficiency causes rickets and osteomalacia. In the UK 29% of adults have vitamin D deficiency. It is recommended all adults take 10µg vitamin D supplement daily. Genetic variations could alter vitamin D status by affecting vitamin D metabolism. Systematic reviews found variations in VDR, GC and CYP2R1 genes are associated with vitamin D deficiency. This study aims to assess the effects between vitamin D supplementation and variations in VDR, GC and CYP2R1 genes on vitamin D status.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

ViDES Trial (Vitamin D Extra Supplementation)

Vitamin D Deficiency

The objective of the study is to compare supplementation with vitamin D at 800 IU/day to usual care for the first 28 days after birth with respect to 25 (OH) vitamin D levels and indicators of likely or plausible effects of vitamin D supplementation on the function or structure of the lung, bones, immune system, and brain in extremely premature (EP) infants who are <28 weeks gestational age (GA) or <1000 grams of birth weight (BW). The study results will be analyzed as intention to treat Bayesian analyses (Frequentist analyses will also be performed).

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Peripheral Immunological Effects of High-dose Vitamin D Treatment in Healthy Subjects

Vitamin d Deficiency

Vitamin D deficiency is associated with the risk of developing MS. Vitamin D treatment has therefore been tested as a background treatment for this pathology, with a seemingly modest clinical effect. Indeed, the first therapeutic trials using high doses of vitamin D (SOLAR and CHOLINE) did not show a significant effect on short-term relapses. However, these two studies showed a significant decrease in the radiological activity of MS on MRI, suggesting a significant immunomodulatory efficacy but a weak clinical benefit in the short term. Vitamin D has a pleiotropic effect on the immune system inducing overall immunomodulation through transcriptomic modulations, under the control of many individual genetic factors. However, in vivo, only one therapeutic trial has compared the immunological effect of Vitamin D in healthy subjects and in patients with a first demyelinating episode. Analysis of PBMC by flow cytometric cell sorting based on a very small number of markers (CD3, CD8, IL-17, IFN-g) did not find any significant quantitative modulation of Th17 or of their production of IL-10, IL-17 and IFN-g after treatment with Vitamin D measured by ELISA. However, the evolution of anti-inflammatory lymphocyte populations has not been evaluated. A few in vitro studies suggest that the effect of vitamin D may be incomplete on the lymphocytes of MS patients. The study investigators will use an immunological FACS approach to describe activation markers and measure the intensity of changes induced in healthy subjects after 3 months of high-dose cholecalciferol versus placebo treatment using the same protocol as the D-Lay MS (NCT01817166) study.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria
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