Терапевтический архив (Dec 2020)

The role of vitamin D in seasonal acute respiratory viral infections and COVID-19

  • E. A. Pigarova,
  • A. A. Povalyaeva,
  • L. K. Dzeranova,
  • L. Y. Rozhinskaya,
  • N. G. Mokrysheva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26442/00403660.2020.11.000785
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 92, no. 11
pp. 98 – 105

Abstract

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A link between vitamin D deficiency and susceptibility to infectious diseases was suggested over a hundred years ago. Epidemiological studies show a strong association between seasonal fluctuations in vitamin D levels and the incidence of various infectious diseases, including septic shock, acute respiratory infections, and influenza. Our understanding of vitamin D metabolism and its extra-skeletal functions has improved significantly over the past three decades, and the discovery that the vitamin D receptor and 1a-hydroxylase, an enzyme needed to convert vitamin D to its active form, is present in the cells of the immune system, revolutionized in this area. Recent studies have shown that vitamin D regulates the expression of specific endogenous antimicrobial peptides in immune cells, modulates the immune response and the course of autoimmune processes; these actions indicate the potential role of vitamin D in modulating the immune response to various infectious diseases. This publication reviews the literature on the effects of vitamin D on immunity, its potential in the prevention and treatment of viral diseases, with a particular focus on COVID-19.

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