Title: Vitamins
1Vitamins
- Usha Sethuraman, MD
- Emergency Medicine
- Childrens Hospital of Michigan
2Case 1
- A 2 year old boy is brought by the mother to your
office for a routine visit. She is worried that
he is not walking yet. He was born at 30 weeks
gestation and was exclusively breast fed until 10
months of age and has been a poor feeder since
then. On exam he is short with bow legs and has
frontal bossing and no teeth. His height and
weight are less than the 5th percentile. You
confirm your clinical diagnosis with appropriate
labs and start treatment. Mom is upset and wants
to know the cause.
3Case 2
- A 5 year old girl is brought to your office with
the complaint that something is wrong with her
eyes maybe he needs glasses. The child was
adopted from an underdeveloped country at 4years
of age and since arrival has been noticed to
squint a lot and bump into objects in the evening
hours.On exam he has a triangular silvery plaque
in the scleral area of both eyes and his vision
appears normal. You send him to an
ophthalmologist who makes the diagnosis and
recommends the appropriate treatment.
4Case 3
- A 2year old boy is brought to your office with
the history of refusing to move his legs. He has
had no fever, no trauma and has been fussy for
past week. On exam he is irritable and refuses to
stand. He screams when you touch his legs. You
send him for x-rays suspecting a fracture. You
get the news the next day from the radiologist.
You start appropriate treatment and on follow up
in 2 months he is a smiling normal child.
5Background
- Vitamins are organic compounds that are required
in small amounts for normal cellular metabolisms
that are important for the growth of the
organisms. - Discovered by Hopkins in 1907
- Named by Funk in 1911
- Classified by McCollum into fat and water soluble
6Classification
- Fat soluble vitamins include A,E,D and K
- Water soluble vitamins include B and C
- Vitamins are accessory food factors that are
essential for metabolic reactions and form
coenzymes
7Vitamin A
- Derived from pigments called carotenoids
- In nature these are called provitamins A
- Includes 4 compounds
- The first three are hydrocarbons and the fourth
is a ßcarotene
8Vitamin A - Properties
- Vitamin A and its provitamins are water
insoluble and fat soluble - They are destroyed by light exposure and
oxidation - Protected by the presence of vitamin E
- Destroyed by dehydration but not by canning or
freezing
9Absorption and distribution
- Exists as esters of retinol in animal products
and as ß-carotene in vegetables - Esters are hydrolysed in the intestinal lumen
and absorbed as retinol but later converted to
retinal - The esters are stored in the liver
- When needed they are hydrolysed to retinol and
transported by ABP
10Absorption and metabolism
- Normal plasma has 18-60µ of vitamin A in 100ml
- Levels are maintained by release from liver
- Very small amounts are excreted normally
- Mineral oils increases excretion
11Food sources and Requirement
- Mainly animal sources
- Liver oils of fish, egg yolk, butter, milk
- Carotenes are found in green and yellow
vegetables - Children and infants require 300µg per day
12Functions of Vitamin A
- Related to 3 main retinoids retinol, retinal,
and retinoic acid - Retinol is important for growth and integrity of
epithelial cells - Retinal is important for physiology of vision
- Retinoic acid is essential for synthesis of
glycoproteins
13Causes of deficiency
- Inadequate absorption as in celiac disease
- Chronic mineral oil consumption
- Poor intake of fat and protein
- Hepatic disease
14Deficiency manifestations
- Skin dry and scaly follicular hyperkeratosis
- Common on the thigh and extensor surfaces
15Clinical manifestations
- Mucus membranes atrophy resulting in
keratinization - Resembles epidermis
- Common in lacrimal glands, GI tract, respiratory
tract and genitourinary tract
16Hyperkeratosis follicularis
17Deficiency manifestations
- Eyes keratinization of the conjunctiva results
in xerophthalmia - Bitots spots may occur
- When the cornea is involved, vision is impaired
- Severe cases result in keratomalacia and blindness
18Bitots spots
19Bitots spots
20xerophthalmia
21Keratomalacia
22Deficiency manifestation
- Walds cycle is a constant splitting and
resynthesis of vitamin A containing pigment in
the retina - Deficiency results in delay in resynthesis
- Causes night blindness or nyctalopia
23Deficiency manifestations
- Bones defective endochondral formation
- Decreased osteoblastic activity
- Cancellous bones
24Effects of excess
- Drowsiness
- Painful joints
- Periosteal thickening of long bones
- Increased intracranial pressure
- Loss of hair
- carotenemia
25Treatment
- Oral vitamin A 1500µg/day for 5days
- Then 7500µ//day parenterally until recovery
26Vitamin D
- Precursors are called Provitamins-D
- 2 important provitamins
- Ergosterol (provitamin D2)
- 7dehyrdrocholesterol (provitamin D3)
- D2 occurs in fungi and yeast
- D3 occurs in animals
27Absorption and metabolism
- Irradiation by ultraviolet rays converts
ergosterol into the active ergocalciferol
(vitamin D2 ) - 7dehydrocholesterol is converted to
cholecalciferol (vitamin D3 )
28Properties
- Vitamin D is fat soluble
- Resistant to oxidation and heat
- Readily absorbed from small intestine
29Absorption and metabolism
- Carried in the chylomicrons to liver
- Hydroxylated by 25 hydroxylase to
25hydroxycholecalciferol - Further hydroxylated in renal tubules by
1hydroxylase to 1,25 dihydroxycholecalciferol
which acts as a harmone
30Sources and requirement
- Vitamin D fortified milk
- Margarine, fish liver oil, egg yolk
- Infants and children require 200-400 IU/day
31Functions
- Regulates calcium and phophorus metabolisms
- Releases calcium from bones and increases
absorption from intestines - Hypocalcemia causes parathormone release
- Parathormone increases levels of 1,25 (OH)2 D3
32Functions
- Hypophosphatemia directly causes formation of
1,25(OH)2 D3 - This increases absorption of phosphate from the
intestines - Promotes endochondral growth of long bones
33Functions
- Mineralization of zone of provisional
calcification (antirachitic action) - Deficiency results in defect in these areas but
with continued cartilage growth
34Deficiency - causes
- Exclusively breast fed infants with no sunlight
exposure or supplementation - Dark skinned babies
- Rapid growth as in low birth weight infants and
adolescents - Congenital rickets can occur when maternal stores
of D are low
35Deficiency - causes
- Celiac disease
- Pancreatitis
- Steatorrhea
- Cystic fibrosis
- Anticonvulsants
- steroids
36Clinical manifestations of deficiency
- Results in rickets in children and osteomalacia
in adults - Infants show seizures, hypotonia, failure to
thrive, widened sutures, frontal bossing,
craniotabes - Older children show pot belly, delayed
milestones, delayed dentition, bowlegs, kyphosis,
pelvic abnormalities
37Clinical manifestations of deficiency
- Rachitic rosary can occur
- Harrisons groove is a depression along lower
border of chest
38Rickets knock knees
39Rickets - wrists
40Rickety rosary
41Rickets - ankles
42Harrison groove
43Frontal bossing of rickets
44Diagnosis
- Lowered serum calcium and phosphorus
- Elevated alkaline phosphorus
- Urinary cyclic AMP is elevated
- Decreased 25 hydroxy D3
- Generalized aminoaciduria occurs
45Diagnosis of rickets
- Xrays of the wrist and knees are best
- Widened distal ends with cupping and fraying
- Uncalcified larger metaphysis and osteopenia
- A zone of preparatory calcification separated
from the distal end by a zone of decreased
calcification suggests healing
46Rickets xray
47Rickets - wrists
48Rickets - shoulder
49Rickets
50Vitamin D resistant rickets
- Also known as familial hypophosphatemia
- Defect in the proximal reabsorption of phosphates
- Defect in the conversion of 25 (OH)2D3 to
1,25(OH)2 D3 - X linked dominant inheritance
- Bowing of legs appear but all else is absent
51Vitamin D resistant rickets
- Near normal calcium levels
- Lowered phosphorus levels
- Elevated alkaline phosphate
- Large urinary losses of phosphates
- No evidence of secondary hyperparathyroidism
52Vitamin D dependant rickets
- Due to reduced activity of 1 a hydroxylase
- Decreased calcium, phosphorus
- Elevated alkaline phosphatase
- Levels of 1,25 (OH)2 D3 are low
53Renal rickets
- Due to phosphaturia of uremia
- Secondary hyperparathyroidism results in renal
osteodystrophy
54Treatment
- Calcium and phosphorus levels are corrected
- Daily oral vitamin D 150-300 µg (5000-10000 IU)
- Single dose of 10,000µg can be given parenterally
- Increase in phosphate occurs in 4 days with xray
evidence of healing in 1-2 weeks
55Treatment
- Vitamin D dependant and resistant rickets are
treated with high amounts of phosphates and 1,25
(OH)2 D3
56Prevention
- AAP recommendation (April 2003, Pediatrics)
- all infants including those who are exclusively
breast fed should have a minimum vitamin D intake
of at least 200 IU beginning in the first 2
months and continued through adolescence - Higher bone density in women supplemented with
vitamin D in infancy
57Prevention - tips
- Breast milk contains less than 25 IU/L of vitamin
D - Formula has a minimum of 400 IU/L
- If an infant is ingesting at least 500ml of
formula he or she will receive the recommended
intake of 200 IU/day
58Prognosis
- Very good provided treatment is initiated early
- Early treatment prevents developmental delay
- Orthopedic intervention may be required
59Treatment of rickets
60Excess effects
- Hypotonia, anorexia
- Polydipsia, polyuria, dehydration
- Hypertension, corneal clouding
- Xrays show calcifications and osteoporosis
61Vitamin E
- Group of compounds called tocopherols
- Possess antioxidation properties particularly of
fats - This is facilitated by presence of ascorbic acid
62Properties
- Esters are fat soluble
- Susceptible to oxidation leading to loss of
vitamin activity - Protect the less susceptible compounds by
breaking up the chain of oxidation reactions - Heat stable
63Food sources
- Lettuce and green vegetables
- Vegetable oils
- Milk
- eggs
64Requirement and functions
- 0.7mg/g of fat seems to be adequate
- Inhibits oxidation of LDL cholesterol
- Acts on immunomodulation
- Inhibits platelet acitivity
- Involved in biosynthesis of coenzyme Q that is
important in electron transport
65Deficiency - causes
- Malabsorption
- Abetalipoproteinemia
- Short bowel syndrome
- Cholestatic disease
- Very low birth weight infants
66Deficiency
- Muscle weakness
- Loss of position sense
- Hemolytic anemia
- Double vision
- Reduced reflexes
- Constriction of visual fields
- Sterility in animals
- Arteriosclerosis?
67Vitamin K
- Substances with vitamin K activity are
naphthoquinones - Absorbed mainly from the jejunum
- Bile salts are necessary for this
- Storage is unknown
- Excreted in feces
68Sources
- Green leafy vegetables
- Cabbage
- Tomatoes
- Intestinal flora
69Function
- Essential for synthesis of prothrombin
- Coagulation factors II, IV, IX and X are vitamin
K dependant - Plays a role in mitochondrial oxidative
phosphorylation
70Deficiency - causes
- Intestinal flora produces adequate amounts
- Hence dietary deficiency is rare
- Newborns are deficient because of lower
intestinal flora content, inadequate bile flow,
intestinal hypermotility
71Deficiency - causes
- Prolonged oral antibiotics
- Biliary obstruction, sprue, chronic diarrhea
- Hepatocellular damage
72Clinical features of deficiency
- Uncontrollable bleeding in newborns
- Exaggerated in preterms who present between 2nd
and 7th day with bleeding - Hemorrhage is more common with breast fed infants
- Maternal drugs like phenytoin cause early bleeding
73Clinical findings
- Bleeding from intracranial, GI, nasal,
circumcision site - Reports of late bleeding occuring several weeks
later
74Diagnosis
- Prolonged PT and PTT
- Normal platelet count
- Normal bleeding time
- Normal plasma fibrinogen levels
75Treatment
- All newborns should get 1mg of vitamin K
- AAP recommendation is all newborns should get
parenteral vitamin K to prevent delayed bleeding
76Water soluble vitamins B complex
- Include
- B1 (Thiamine)
- B2 (Riboflavin)
- Niacin (P-P factor of Goldberger)
- Pyridoxine (B6 )
- Pantothenic acid
- Biotin, folic acid, and B12
- Lipoic acid and inositol
77Thiamine (B1 )
- Water soluble
- Destroyed by heat
- Synthesis is limited in man
- Children require 0.3mg-0.9mg/day
78Sources
- Breast milk and cows milk
- Vegetables
- Rice polishings
- Meat
- Legumes
- Wheat germ
79Functions
- TPP functions as a coenzyme in decarboxylation
and transketolation of a-ketoacids - Helps in synthesis of fats from CHO
- Required for synthesis of acetylcholine
80Deficiency
- Results in beriberi
- Irritability, fatigue
- Decreased tendon reflexes
- Peripheral neuritis
- Loss of vibration sense
- Congestive cardiac failure
- Hoarseness of voice and ataxia
81Deficiency
- Edema present in wet beriberi but absent in dry
beriberi - Wernickes encephalopathy mental changes, eye
changes, cerebral bleeds
82Diagnosis and treatment
- Clinical response to thiamine is best
- Treat mother and baby that is breast fed
- 50mg/day for an adult and 10mg/day for an infant
83Riboflavin
- Forms 2 phosphorylated derivatives
- Serve as coenzymes in oxidation reduction
reactions and for hydrogen transfers - Is necessary for normal metabolism of tryptophan
and oxidation of fatty acids - For retinal pigment
84Sources
- Eggs
- Milk
- Cheese
- Liver
- Leafy vegetables
85Requirement and deficiency
- 0.5-1.0mg/day is required
- Deficiency results in
- Cheilosis, glossitis
- Keratitis, photophobia
- Anemia
- Seborrheic dermatitis
- A urine level of lt 30µg/day is abnormal
86Cheilosis
87Treatment
- 3-10 mg/day of oral riboflavin
88Niacin
- Forms NAD and NADPH important in glycolysis and
electron transport - End product of metabolic pathway of tryptophan
- Daily requirement is 5-13 NE
- Liver and poultry are good sources
- Milk and eggs are antipellagra
89Deficiency
- Pellagra results
- Diarrhea, dementia, dermatitis
- Skin changes resemble sunburn
- Seen in face, neck, dorsal forearms
- Diagnosis is mainly clinical
- Treat with 50-300mg of niacin
- Supplement with other vitamins
90(No Transcript)
91Pellagra
92Pellagra
93Pyridoxine (vitamin B6 )
- Found in yeast, rice polishings and cereal
- Serves as coenzyme in metabolism and transfer of
aminoacids - Synthesis in man is limited
- Hence dietary sources are important
94Deficiency and treatment
- Seizures, peripheral neuritis, dermatitis,
microcytic anemia - Large amounts of xanthurenic acid in urine
following administration of tryptophan confirms
diagnosis - Administration of 100mg of pyridoxine
intramuscularly in child with seizures - In B6 dependant children 10-100mg of pyridoxine
orally
95Vitamin B12
- Humans cannot make B12
- Microorganisms in animals make B12
- The vitamin combines with intrinsic factor in the
stomach - The complex is then absorbed in the terminal
ileum - Bound to transcobolamin it enters cell
96Functions
- Involved in DNA synthesis and methyl group
transfer - Involved in synthesis of protein in the
microsomal system - Important for normal maintenance of hemopoiesis
- Hence also called erythrocyte maturation factor
97Requirement and food sources
- Daily requirement is 2-4 mcg
- Content of foods is low
- Only animal sources contain vitamin
- Liver, kidney, eggs, meat and milk
98Deficiency - causes
- Occurs in pure vegetarians
- Resection of terminal ileum or stomach
- Inhibition of B12 intrinsic factor complex
- Abnormalities of receptors on ileum
- Abnormalities of transcobolamin
99Deficiency manifestations
- Glossitis , peripheral sensory problems
- Gross deficiency results in pernicious anemia
- Arrested RBC development with accumulation of
megaloblasts and myeloblasts - Macrocytic anemia
- Degeneration of posterior and lateral columns of
spinal cord
100Glossitis
101Deficiency manifestations
- Pernicious anemia is autosomal recessive
- Deficiency of gastric intrinsic factor
- Symptomatic at 9 years of age
- Anorexia, irritability, painful red tongue
- Ataxia, decreased reflexes, clonus and coma
102Pernicious anemia
103Diagnosis
- Anemia- macrocytic, megaloblastic
- Hypersegmented neutrophils
- Elevated LDH
- Low serum levels of B12
- Excessive methylmalonic acid in urine
- Schillings test may be abnormal even after
therapy
104Treatment
- Prompt hematological response is seen in 2-4 days
after treatment with 1mg of the vitamin
105Folate
- Synthesized by intestinal bacteria
- Folinic results from reduction
- Ascorbic acid and B12 are required
106Sources
- Green leafy vegetables
- Cauliflower
- Yeast
- Liver
- kidney
107Functions
- Important in the synthesis of nucleic acids
- Helps with maturation of red blood cells
- Required for normal metabolic pathway of histidine
108Deficiency
- Occurs in very low birth weight infants
- Following intestinal resection
- Megaloblastic anemia
- Diarrhea, glossitis can occur
- Failure to gain weight, irritability
109Diagnosis
- Macrocystic, megaloblastic anemia
- Hypersegmented neutrophils
- Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia
- Levels of folate may be lt 3ng/ml
110Treatment
- 1-5 mg of folate orally or parenterally
- Treating pernicious anemia with folate may cause
cure of anemia without change in neurological
abnormalities
111Vitamin C
- Potent reducing agent
- Present in citrus fruits, spinach, cauliflower
- Liver, kidney, adrenals
- Requirement is 75-100mg/day
112Function
- Forms the ground substance between capillary
walls, osteoid tissue, collagen - Involved in oxidation reduction eractions
- Required for normal growth and maturation of cells
113Deficiency - causes
- Occurs in infants with mothers whose diets are
deficient in the vitamin - Infants fed with unsupplemented evaporated milk
- Fever
- Diarrhea
- Protein depletion
114Clinical findings
- Irritability
- Generalized tenderness causing pseudoparalysis
- Frog position of legs
- Peripheral edema
- Swelling of gums
- Petechial hemorrhages
- Scorbitic beads in the ribs
115Scurvy
116Scurvy
117Scurvy
118Diagnosis
- X-ray findings
- Ground glass appearance of bones
- Pencil thin cortex
- Zone of calcified cartilage at the metaphysis
(white line of Fraenkel) - Zone of rarefaction proximal to this
- Vitamin C level of zero in the buffy layer
119Scurvy
120Treatment
- 100-200 mg/day produces quick healing