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Haematologica 90 (3), 341-7 (Mar 2005)
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology 25 (7), 805-12 (01 Mar 2007)
BMC cancer 5, 108 (2005)
The New England journal of medicine 355 (15), 1517-9 (12 Oct 2006)
Endocrine 33 (1), 90 (2008)
The literature describing vitamin D content of fat tissue is extremely limited. We conducted a pilot study that measured the concentrations of vitamin D(3) in the fat tissue and serum of obese adults. These measurements were performed using a new liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC/MS) method. The objectives of this study were: to measure and report the vitamin D(3) concentration in serum and subcutaneous fat samples from obese individuals and to examine the association of vitamin D(3) in fat with vitamin D(3) in serum. This cross-sectional study was conducted in 17 obese men and women who were scheduled to undergo gastric bypass surgery. The mean vitamin D(3) concentration in subjects? subcutaneous fat tissue samples was 102.8 +/- 42.0 nmol/kg. The mean vitamin D(3) concentration in serum was 7.78 +/- 3.99 nmol/l. Vitamin D(3) concentrations of fat tissue and serum were positively correlated (r = 0.68, P = 0.003). Consistent with previous findings in obese subjects, subjects in this study had suboptimal vitamin D status as demonstrated by a mean 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration of 43.3 +/- 15.4 nmol/l. In conclusion, fat tissue vitamin D(3) can be measured by LC/MS and is detectable in obese subjects with suboptimal vitamin D status. Compatible with the long-standing concept that fat tissue is a storage site for vitamin D, fat tissue and serum vitamin D(3) concentrations were positively correlated.
Members of the miRNA200 Family Regulate Olfactory Neurogenesis
Neuron 57 (1), 41 (2008)
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