Abstract

Excessive body weight and obesity in childhood and adolescence are becoming more and more important unfavorable factors that entail extremely adverse consequences and require close attention of physicians of any specialty. Along with the high prevalence of obesity and metabolic syndrome in pediatric patients, children and adolescents in the majority of countries are diagnosed with vitamin D deficiency. Among the non-calcaemic effects of vitamin D, a significant role is played by its impact on the hormonal regulation of glucose metabolism and the synthesis of adipokines by fat tissue. The review presents literature data indicative of a close pathogenic relationship between vitamin D insufficiency and impaired tissue insulin sensitivity. It demonstrates the role of vitamin D insufficiency in immune reactions resulting in development of subclinical inflammation in fat tissue infiltrated with macrophages and lymphocytes. It also shows the role of adipokines, immune system cells and pro-inflammatory cytokines produced by them in the pathogenesis of obesity, as well as the function of vitamin D as an endocrine and paracrine regulator of the process of inflammation in adipose tissue. The relationships between the principal adipokines (leptin, adiponectin, resistin) are revealed in the presence of normal vitamin D content and in vitamin D deficiency. The carbohydrate and lipid metabolism parameters in overweight children and adolescents with vitamin D insufficiency are analyzed. A high prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency in overweight and obese children and adolescents (increasing along with the severity of obesity) is demonstrated. The review also presents the current recommendations for the correction of vitamin D insufficiency and underlines the need for higher cholecalciferol doses to achieve serum calcifediol targets in overweight and obese children and adolescents.

Highlights

  • Prevention of obesity is one of the most important problems of today’s medical science, since the rate at which the prevalence of obesity is increasing worldwide indicates a pandemic [1, 2]

  • The prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency among children and adolescents with obesity is extremely high: 96.0% in Germany, 78.4% in the United States, and up to 92.0% in the Russian Federation

  • Excessive body weight results in accumulation of adipose tissue, impaired adipocyte function, development of adipocyte hypertrophy, and an altered adipokine secretion profile. These changes result in migration and transformation of macrophages and in the development of adipose tissue inflammation

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Prevention of obesity is one of the most important problems of today’s medical science, since the rate at which the prevalence of obesity is increasing worldwide indicates a pandemic [1, 2]. People of color (blacks, Hispanics and anyone with increased skin melanin pigmentation), obese children and adults and children and adults who practice abstinence from direct sun exposure are at especially high risk [9] These studies are the result of understanding that vitamin D is not a vitamin in the classical interpretation. A steady rise in obesity prevalence among children is currently seen in countries with medium and low income levels. These countries are following the path trod by economically developed countries 40 years ago, as the prevalence of obesity in their pediatric populations is rapidly growing. In Eastern European countries (Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, etc.), the Russian Federation, and Turkey, the prevalence of obesity (including excessive body weight) is in the range of 14.4–19.2% among boys and 11.8–17.6% among girls [17]

D AND ADIPOSE TISSUE
Findings
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
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