Affiliation:
1. Russian Medical Academy of Continuous Profssional Education
2. Stavropol State Medical University; Regional Children’s Clinical Hospital
3. Stavropol State Medical University; Philippskiy City Children’s Clinical Hospital; SOGAZ International Medical Center
4. Stavropol State Medical University
Abstract
Urinary tract infections are a common global problem among physicians of various specialties, including therapists, pediatricians, nephrologists and urologists. Today UTI is one of the leading bacterial infections in both adult and child populations. The main type of therapy and prevention of recurrent UTI is the use of drugs with an antibacterial effect (antibiotics, uroseptics). An urgent problem in modern medical practice is the increasing antibiotic resistance, which requires the development of new approaches to therapy and prevention, including UTI. In recent years, special attention has been paid to the study of vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene polymorphisms as a possible risk factor determining the predisposition to a number of infectious and noninfectious diseases. More than 200 polymorphisms of the VDR gene have been identified, four of which – FokI, BsmI, ApaI, and TaqI – are particularly common. Different VDR alleles can cause small changes in receptor function, which can affect resistance or susceptibility to a particular infection. The review presents data from modern studies demonstrating the relationship between vitamin D supply and development, the frequency of recurrence and the nature of the course of UTI. In one study, vitamin D has been shown to enhance the cathelicidin-mediated antibacterial action of bladder epithelial cells. It also demonstrated the currently known defense mechanisms of vitamin D against urinary tract infections, including its effect on components of the innate immune system.
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