Biomedicines (Jul 2024)

Exploring the Relationship between Lipid Profile, Inflammatory State and 25-OH Vitamin D Serum Levels in Hospitalized Patients

  • Sandica Bucurica,
  • Andreea Simona Nancoff,
  • Madalina Dutu,
  • Mihaela Raluca Mititelu,
  • Laura Elena Gaman,
  • Florentina Ioniță-Radu,
  • Mariana Jinga,
  • Ionela Maniu,
  • Florina Ruța

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12081686
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 1686

Abstract

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Anomalies in lipid metabolism involve multifactorial pathogenesis, among other factors, being associated with an inflammatory state and disturbances in vitamin D status. The literature has focused on the binary relationships between inflammation and dyslipidemia, vitamin D and dyslipidemia, or vitamin D and inflammation. Our study aimed to explore the link between all these three factors: 25-OH vitamin D serum levels, the presence of inflammation assessed through serum C-reactive protein (CRP), and serum lipid profile in 2747 hospitalized patients. Our results showed a positive correlation of HDL-C with 25 (OH) vitamin D and a negative correlation of HDL-C with CRP. This relationship had different patterns in the statistical network analysis. The network analysis patterns are preserved for males and females, except for the relationship between CRP and vitamin D, which is present in male cases and absent in females. The same triangular relationship between all three—CRP, vitamin D, and HDL-C was found with different strengths of partial correlation in obese and non-obese patients. This pattern was similar in patients with and without fatty liver. A shifted pattern was found in the network analysis of hypertensive patients. The CRP was negatively correlated with vitamin D and HDL-C, and vitamin D was positively correlated with HDL-C in non-hypertensive patients. Castelli’s Risk indexes I and II were positively associated with CRP, suggesting that increased cardiovascular risk is proportional to an inflammatory state. The triad formed by altered serum lipid levels, inflammation, and vitamin D represents a complex relationship marked by specific dynamics between lipidic fractions such as HDL-C and C-reactive protein and vitamin D.

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