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Figure 5

描述

Animal models of colitis demonstrate that vitamin D deficiency exacerbates intestinal inflammation, while supplementation or VDR activation attenuates disease severity. These findings support a mechanistic link between vitamin D status and IBD pathophysiology.

Figure 5

Chart
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Source Paper

The Role of Vitamin D in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Mechanism to Management.

Nutrients (2019)

PMID: 31067701

DOI: 10.3390/nu11051019

Cite This Figure

![Figure 5: Animal models of colitis demonstrate that vitamin D deficiency exacerbates intestinal inflammation, while supplementation or VDR activation attenuates disease severity. These findings support a mechanistic link between vitamin D status and IBD pathophysiology.](https://pdfs.citedhealth.com/figures/31067701/109.png)

> Source: Jane Fletcher et al. "The Role of Vitamin D in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Mechanism to Management.." *Nutrients*, 2019. PMID: [31067701](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31067701/)
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  <img src="https://pdfs.citedhealth.com/figures/31067701/109.png" alt="Animal models of colitis demonstrate that vitamin D deficiency exacerbates intestinal inflammation, while supplementation or VDR activation attenuates disease severity. These findings support a mechanistic link between vitamin D status and IBD pathophysiology." />
  <figcaption>Figure 5. Animal models of colitis demonstrate that vitamin D deficiency exacerbates intestinal inflammation, while supplementation or VDR activation attenuates disease severity. These findings support a mechanistic link between vitamin D status and IBD pathophysiology.<br>  Source: Jane Fletcher et al. "The Role of Vitamin D in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Mechanism to Management.." <em>Nutrients</em>, 2019. PMID: <a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31067701/">31067701</a></figcaption>
</figure>