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Vitamin D, 25-Hydroxy (Plasma)

Vitamin D (25-hydroxyvitamin D) reflects total body vitamin D stores and is the preferred test for evaluating vitamin D status in pregnancy. Physiologic hemodilution and altered vitamin D metabolism lead to trimester-specific changes.

Units Non-pregnant Adult 1st Trimester 2nd Trimester 3rd Trimester
ng/mL 14 - 80 18 - 27 10 - 22 10 - 18
nmol/L 35 - 200 45 - 67 25 - 55 25 - 45
Causes of High 25-Hydroxyvitamin D
  • Excess supplementation
  • Granulomatous diseases (sarcoidosis, TB) � ↑ extrarenal 1α-hydroxylase activity
  • Hyperparathyroidism
  • Vitamin D intoxication
  • Lab artifact due to lipemia
Causes of Low 25-Hydroxyvitamin D
  • Insufficient sunlight exposure
  • Low dietary intake
  • Obesity (vitamin D sequestration in adipose tissue)
  • Malabsorption syndromes (celiac, Crohn disease, pancreatic insufficiency)
  • Chronic liver disease (↓ 25-hydroxylation)
  • Chronic kidney disease
  • Anticonvulsant therapy (increased catabolism)
  • Dark skin pigmentation (lower cutaneous synthesis)

References

  1. Abbassi-Ghanavati M, Greer LG, Cunningham FG. Pregnancy and laboratory studies: a reference table for clinicians. Obstet Gynecol. 2009;114(6):1326-31. PMID: 19935037