Vitamin K and Vitamin D Status: Associations with Inflammatory Markers in the Framingham Offspring Study.

Autor: M. Kyla Shea, Sarah L. Booth, Joseph M. Massaro, Paul F. Jacques, Ralph B. DAgostino, Bess Dawson-Hughes, José M. Ordovas, Christopher J. ODonnell, Sekar Kathiresan, John F. Keaney, Ramachandran S. Vasan, Emelia J. Benjamin
Předmět:
Zdroj: American Journal of Epidemiology; Feb2008, Vol. 167 Issue 3, p313-313, 1p
Abstrakt: In vitro data suggest protective roles for vitamins K and D in inflammation. To examine associations between vitamins K and D and inflammation in vivo, the authors used multiple linear regression analyses, adjusted for age, sex, body mass index, triglyceride concentrations, use of aspirin, use of lipid-lowering medication, season, menopausal status, and hormone replacement therapy. Participants were from the Framingham Offspring Study (1997–2001; n = 1,381; mean age = 59 years; 52% women). Vitamin K status, measured by plasma phylloquinone concentration and phylloquinone intake, was inversely associated with circulating inflammatory markers as a group and with several individual inflammatory biomarkers (p p p < 0.01), overall associations between vitamin D status and inflammation were inconsistent. The observation that high vitamin K status was associated with lower concentrations of inflammatory markers suggests that a possible protective role for vitamin K in inflammation merits further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index