Litcius/Paper detail

Perinatal outcomes of high-dose vitamin D administration in the last trimester

Gülin Karacan Küçükali, Melikşah Keskın, Şenay Savaş Erdeve, Semra Çeti̇nkaya

2021Journal of Turkish Society of Obstetric and Gynecology10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In recent years, interest in the evaluation of vitamin D levels and the possible outcomes of their deficiency during pregnancy has increased. However, there is no consensus on when to start vitamin D supplementation, its duration, dosage, and the optimum level during pregnancy. The toxicity of vitamin D is as important as its deficiency. From the history of a 5-day-old male baby who was investigated for hypercalcemia, it was learned that the mother took 300,000 IU vitamin D-five ampoules/oral at 30 weeks of gestation every other day. The infant was born prematurely, postpartum bradycardia required positive pressure ventilation, and his hypercalcemia lasted approximately 4 months despite treatment. Maternal excessive and inappropriate use of vitamin D can cause preterm labor and severe hypercalcemia, which is a life-threatening complication in the neonatal period. This case is presented to draw attention to the negative effects of maternal high-dose vitamin D during pregnancy.

Topics & Concepts

Administration (probate law)MedicineFirst trimesterVitaminObstetricsPregnancyEndocrinologyPolitical scienceGestationBiologyGeneticsLawVitamin D Research StudiesPregnancy and Medication ImpactPregnancy and preeclampsia studies