ABSTRACT
            Animal studies have revealed that the biologically active metabolite of vitamin D—1,25 dihydroxy-vitamin D (1,25[OH]2D)—can  modulate various processes involved in the pathogenesis of  cardiovascular disease (CVD) through its role in calcium homeostasis and  through the participation of its receptor—a steroid hormone nuclear  receptor—in the regulation of gene transcription. Its effects appear to  support normal myocardial contractility, vasomotor activity, and nitric  oxide production, while reducing the risk of cardiac hypertrophy and  atherosclerosis. Thus, vitamin D may be beneficial in patients with  heart failure, arrhythmias, ischemic heart disease, or hypertension.  Additionally, its effects appear to be enhanced by common cardiac drugs  such as beta blockers, thiazide diuretics, aspirin, etc., which suggests  it may permit a reduction in drug dosages and, consequently, in the  risk of adverse effects. Evidence of its potential benefits is very  preliminary, and its therapeutic value in specific heart-related  conditions is unknown. Current recommendations for achieving maximum  cardiac benefit from vitamin D are to monitor vitamin D  status—especially in elderly patients, who may present with symptoms  that could be related to CVD or to vitamin D insufficiency—and to  encourage optimal intake. Food sources are limited; therefore a  nutritional supplement should be prescribed. Patients should also be  encouraged to increase their sun exposure, because vitamin D3—the  form produced in the skin on exposure to ultraviolet light--has  demonstrated particular efficacy in conditions that contribute  specifically to heart disease. Naturally, this recommendation should be  accompanied by instructions to follow current guidelines for increasing  sun exposure without increasing the risk of skin cancer.
            INTRODUCTION
            The role and function of Vitamin D are detailed elsewhere in this Journal.1  Briefly, it is a steroid hormone whose primary function is to maintain  calcium homeostasis by enhancing calcium absorption from the intestinal  tract, promoting osteoblast differentiation, and inhibiting osteoclast  activity. By supporting calcium homeostasis, vitamin D inhibits  substances that are activated by low serum calcium levels—including  parathyroid hormone (PTH)—most of which promote bone resorption as a  means of restoring normal calcium levels. Its biologically active  metabolite, 1,25 dihydroxy-vitamin D (1,25[OH]2D),  binds with the vitamin D receptor (VDR), a steroid hormone nuclear  receptor that participates in the regulation of gene transcription.  Because of the virtually ubiquitous nature of the VDR, vitamin D can  affect a myriad of functions in body tissues, including intracellular  signaling pathways that block cell proliferation, promote cell  differentiation, modulate immune activity, and influence blood pressure  (BP).
            Its potential cardiovascular benefits are associated with its ability to inhibit PTH,2  which is involved in the pathogenesis of several conditions that  increase the risk for heart disease (HD); and with its effects on the  vasculature, including improved calcium uptake,3  inhibition of platelet aggregation, enhanced nitric oxide synthase  production, inhibition of abnormal thrombotic activity and, possibly,  the regulation of vasomotor reactivity to neural input.4-6
            Unfortunately, Vitamin D deficiency is common  and commonly overlooked, particularly among hospital inpatients,  including those with several risk factors for HD such as hypertension  and diabetes mellitus.7 The coexistence  of risk factors for HD and vitamin D insufficiency certainly does not  establish a cause-and-effect relationship, but given the preliminary  evidence of a role for vitamin D in normal cardiovascular activity, the  possibility of such a relationship is worth exploring.
            
            
            VITAMIN D: POTENTIAL MECHANISMS OF ACTION IN THE HEART
            Vitamin D and the Risk of Heart Failure
            Heart failure (HF) is characterized by disordered heart structure and function that interferes with normal filling or ejection.8 Diastolic HF is, in part, associated with impaired ventricular relaxation, as in cardiac fibrosis or hypertrophy. Systolic HF occurs when impaired myocardial contractility results in reduced stroke volume and cardiac output.8,9  Preliminary evidence of vitamin D’s influence on the size, character,  and contractility of myocardial tissue suggests that it may have a  beneficial effect in either type of HF.
            Effect on risk of hypertrophy
            There is some evidence that vitamin D3  (cholecalciferol), the form produced in the skin on exposure to  sunlight, reduces the risk of cardiac hypertrophy. Studies in rats  suggest that the VD3R acts synchronously  with retinoic acid receptors on cardiomyocytes and vascular smooth  muscle cells to reduce cell size, and that 1,25(OH)2D3 inhibits the maturation of cardiomyocytes.10,11 Support for its role in preventing hypertrophy has also been provided by animal studies in which vitamin D3 deficiency led  to cardiac hypertrophy characterized by a significant increase in  collagen-filled extracellular space and an increase in myofibrillar  area.12
            Cell size is also regulated indirectly through  protein kinase C (PKC), which can be activated by norepinephrine (NE),  angiotensin II (Ang II), or PTH to contribute to cell enlargement.  Studies in mouse myocardial cells have shown that increased PKC activity  can result in left ventricular hypertrophy.13 Vitamin D may limit this hypertrophic response by inhibiting PTH activity, thereby preventing it from activating PKC.
            Effect on cardiac contractility
            Animal studies have provided evidence of a role  for vitamin D in supporting normal heart muscle contractility. Studies  of vitamin D3 deficiency in the neonatal rat heart have suggested an inverse correlation between serum 1,25(OH)2D3 levels and the myosin isozyme concentration in ventricular myocytes,11 and studies in adult animals suggest that the 1,25(OH)2D3 level only needs to be restored to normal to achieve maximum contractility.14  There may be a second mechanism for vitamin D’s support of cardiac  contractility: calcium homeostasis. By inhibiting PTH-induced  mobilization of calcium from bone, vitamin D reduces the risk of  calcification of heart valves and coronary vessel walls.15
            
            
            Vitamin D and the Risk of Arrhythmias
            Its ability to promote calcium homeostasis may  also enable vitamin D to prevent arrhythmias. Cardiac action potentials  are generated by the movement of calcium through calcium channels in  nodal tissue. Intracellular calcium modulates the activity of sodium  channels--which transmit these action potentials throughout the  myocardial tissue--to keep the heart rate under control. If calcium  homeostasis is disrupted, an arrhythmia or mechanical dysfunction (i.e.,  reduced cell contractility) may develop, which, if uncorrected, could  result in cell injury or death. Studies in rats have shown that vitamin D  also stimulates the uptake of calcium by ventricular myocardial cells  to help maintain calcium homeostasis in the heart.16
            Vitamin D vs Ischemic Heart Disease
            Clinical studies suggest that PTH contributes  to changes in the structure and function of blood vessel walls that  increase the risk of atherosclerosis,2 particularly by promoting the formation of intra-arterial plaque. By suppressing PTH activity, vitamin D3 may reduce the risk of calcification and stenosis in the coronary vessels.17
            Vitamin D may also help maintain normal  vascular activity by supporting the production of nitric oxide synthase.  This effect has also been suggested by the observation that VDR  knockout mice exhibit a significant increase in platelet aggregation,  and suppression of gene products necessary for antithrombin activity.4
            Vitamin D vs Hypertension
            Four key contributors to hypertension are Angiotensin II, Norepinephrine, natriuretic peptide (ANP), and calcium.
            The angiotensin II/NE connection
            Ang II, a product of the renin-angiotensin  system, induces arteriolar constriction and raises both diastolic and  systolic BP. In rats, when myocardial cells stretch in response to  increased filling, Ang II production increases to help restore normal  vascular tone. An increase in Ang II levels stimulates the release of  NE, thereby enhancing its own vasoconstrictive effect.13  The addition of NE activity may increase the risk of damage to the  myocardial cell, given its ability to enhance myocardial contractility.  If serum NE (and Ang II) levels are not regulated, the result could be  an arrhythmia or possibly a myocardial infarction.8 Vitamin D3 may have a preventive effect, given that 1,25(OH)2D3  has been shown to control renin activity and, thus, may be able to  modulate the release of Ang II. The consequent reduction in serum Ang II  (and, consequently NE) levels might prevent BP from rising excessively  and reduce the risk of an arrhythmia.
            
            
            The ANP connection
            ANP is released by atrial myocardial cells and  acts on receptors in the kidney to oppose Ang II activity and reduce BP.  In a recent animal study, 1,25(OH)2D3 blocked ANP production in the presence of an extremely potent vasoconstrictor, endothelin,10  and, thus, helped prevent hypotension. This effect contrasts with its  hypotensive effect through control of renin activity. The fact that it  may be able to inhibit Ang II through its effect on renin, while also  “disinhibiting” Ang II (possibly by opposing ANP) suggests that the  effect of vitamin D on BP may be modulatory, rather than strictly  inhibitory. Further study is warranted to determine which is most  responsible for the effect observed in the ANP study: 1,25(OH)2D3 or endothelin.
            The calcium connection
            Up to one third of individuals with  hyperparathyroidism develop hypertension as well as hypercalcemia, and  the hypertension disappears when the calcium levels are corrected. This  suggests that vitamin D may be able to prevent or reverse hypertension  through its ability to suppress PTH activity.
            VITAMIN D AND THE TREATMENT OF HEART DISEASE
            Vitamin D may lend itself to at least 2  therapeutic approaches to HD: pharmacotherapy and diet. A third  approach—increased physical activity—is not likely to change the  patient’s need for vitamin D significantly from the recommended intake  for healthy individuals.
            Pharmacotherapeutic Approach to HD: A Role for Vitamin D?
            Drugs commonly used in various types of HD  appear to enhance the effects of vitamin D on bone by 1) promoting  osteoblast differentiation (e.g., calcium channel blockers verapamil and  dilitiazem)18; 2) inhibiting substances that block osteoblast activity, such as Ang II (e.g., ACE inhibitors) and NE (e.g., beta blockers)18,19; 3) preventing the loss of calcium in the urine (thiazide diuretics)20;  4) inhibiting the production of prostaglandins by platelet  cyclo-oxygenases (COX, especially COX-2) to prevent bone loss (e.g.,  aspirin).21
            Dietary Approach to HD: A Role for Vitamin D?
            Patients who require a sodium-restricted diet  may find it difficult to maintain an adequate vitamin D intake because  of reduced access to vitamin D-rich foods—which are already few in  number.1 This may become critical in  patients with severe HF or with fluid accumulation in the presence of  diuretic therapy, who may need to limit their sodium intake to 1 g daily  (compared with a normal intake of 6-10 g/d). Such stringent salt  restriction cannot be accomplished without eliminating at least two  important sources of vitamin D: milk and fortified cereals. For these  patients, supplementation is crucial.
            
            READY TO PRESCRIBE VITAMIN D FOR HEART DISEASE?
            Let’s hope not.
            Evidence for vitamin D’s role in maintaining  normal cardiovascular activity is, at best, still preliminary. The only  role that appears to be relevant is that of maintaining calcium  homeostasis. At this point, the best you can do is advise patients with  HD to follow current guidelines for an adequate intake: 400 IU daily is  usually recommended, although ≥ 1000 IU/d of vitamin D3 may be necessary to achieve the highest serum levels possible.1
            Because of the potential benefits of vitamin D3  in HD, one of the best things you could add to a patient’s treatment  plan is a prescription for sunshine. Increased sun exposure is  especially important for elderly patients with HD, who often present  with poor balance, fatigue, muscle weakness, and other symptoms that  could be due to HD or vitamin D insufficiency. These individuals often  avoid the sun because of physical limitations that keep them indoors or a  fear of developing skin cancer. We need to teach them current  guidelines for safe sun exposure—5 to 10 minutes of sunscreen-free  exposure between the hours of 10 am and 3 pm 2 to 3 times a week in a  temperate climate—to achieve maximal vitamin D3  production with minimal skin cancer risk. We should also evaluate their  vitamin D status regularly, perhaps during routine exams.
            CONCLUSION
            Vitamin D appears to play an important role in  maintaining normal cardiovascular activity through its ability to  modulate BP, prevent calcification of the heart and blood vessels,  support normal cardiovascular contractility, and reduce the risk of  thrombosis. Vitamin D3 in particular  appears to maintain normal cardiac contractility and prevent cardiac  hypertrophy, and thus may be helpful in preventing or managing HD. These  effects should be explored further to determine whether vitamin D has a  therapeutic role in HD, but until that role is firmly established, we  can still encourage patients with HD to consume adequate amounts of  vitamin D-rich foods, to take a supplement, and to increase their sun  exposure by following current guidelines for doing so without increasing  their risk of skin cancer. This three-pronged approach is especially  helpful for elderly patients with HD, who often have symptoms that could  be caused by HD or by vitamin D insufficiency. By monitoring their  vitamin D status, the physician may be able to rule out one or another  cause, to make an accurate diagnosis, to select the most effective  treatment available, and, thus, to give the patient the best chance for  an optimal recovery.
            
            
            REFERENCES
            
            
                - Reese, RW: Vitamin D and Bone Health. Jl Lancaster Gen Hosp. 2006; Vol 1, No 3:78-87
- Andersson P, Rydberg E, Willenheimer R. Primary hyperparathyroidism and heart disease: a review. Eur Heart J. 2004;25:1776-1787.
- Hatton DC, Xue H, DeMerritt JA, McCarron DA. 1,25(OY)2 vitamin D3-induced alterations in vascular reactivity in the spontaneously hypertensive rat [abstract]. Am J Med Sci. 1994;307(suppl 1):S154-S158.
- Aihara K-i, Azuma H, Akaike M, et al. Disruption of nuclear vitamin D receptor gene causes enhanced thrombogenicity in mice. J Biol Chem. 2004;269:35798-35802.
- De Novellis V, Loffreda A, Vitagliano S, et al. Effects of  dietary vitamin D deficiency on the cardiovascular system [abstract]. Res Commun Chem Pathol Pharmacol. 1994;83:125-144.
- Scragg R, Jackson R, Holdaway IM, Lim T, Beaglehole R.  Myocardial infarction is inversely associated with plasma  25-hydroxyvitamin D3 levels: a community-based study. Int J Epidemiol. 1990;19:559-563.
- Thomas MK, Lloyd-Jones DM, Thadhani RI, et al. Hypovitaminosis D in medical inpatients. N Engl J Med. 1998;338:777-783.
- Braunwald E. Normal and abnormal myocardial function. In:  Kasper DL, Fauci AS, Longo DL, Braunwald E, Hauser SL, Jameson JL, eds. Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine.16th ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Medical Publishing Division; 2005.
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- Wu J, Garami M, Cheng T, Gardner DG. 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D3 and retinoic acid antagonize endothelin-stimulated hypertrophy of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. J. Clin Invest. 1996;97:1577-1588.
- O’Connell TD, Giacherio DA, Jarvis AK, Simpson RU. Inhibition of cardiac myocyte maturation by 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. Endocrinology. 1995;136:482-488.
- Weishaar RE, Kim S-N, Saunders DE, Simpson RU. Involvement of vitamin D3 with cardiovascular function. III. Effects on physical and morphological properties. Am J Physiol. 1990;258:E134-E142.
- McCarty MF. Nutritional modulation of parathyroid hormone  secretion may influence risk for left ventricular hypertrophy  [abstract]. Med Hypotheses. 2005;64:1015-1021.
- Green JJ, Robinson DA, Wilson GE, Simpson RU, Westfall MV.  Calcitriol modulation of cardiac contractile performance via protein  kinase C [abstract]. J Mol Cell Cardiol. 2006;41:350-359.
- Hörl WH. The clinical consequences of secondary hyperparathyroidism: focus on clinical outcomes. Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2004;19(suppl 5):v2-v8.
- Walters MR, Ilenchuk TT, Claycomb WC. 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 stimulates 45Ca2+ uptake by cultured adult rat ventricular cardiac muscle cells. J Biol Chem. 1987;262:2536-2541.
- Watson EK, Abrolat ML, Malone LL, et al. Active serum vitamin D levels are inversely correlated with coronary calcification. Circulation. 1997;96:1755-1760.
- Nishiya Y, Sugimoto S. Effects of various antihypertensive drugs on the functions of osteoblast. Biol Pharm Bull. 2001;24:628-633.
- Kondo H, Nifuji A, Takea S, et al. Unloading induces  osteoblastic cell suppression and osteoclastic cell activation to lead  to bone loss via sympathetic nervous system. J Biol Chem. 2005;5280:30192-30200.
- Schoofs MWCJ, van der Klift M, Hofman A, et al. Thiazide diuretics and the risk for hip fracture. Ann Intern Med. 2003;139:476-482.
- Carbone LD, Tylavsky FA, Cauley JA, et al. Association between  bone mineral density and the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs  and aspirin: impact of cyclooxygenase selectivity [abstract]. J Bone Miner Res. 2003;18:1795-1802.
Roy S. Small, M.D., F.A.C.C.
            Director, Heart Failure Clinic, The Heart Group
            Medical Director, Inpatient Heart Failure Service
            Lancaster General Hospital 
            217 Harrisburg Avenue, Suite 200 
            Lancaster, PA 17603 
            717-397-5484
            small708@redrose.net