Effects of fourteen essential minerals and vitamins on acute and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis: a multivariate Mendelian randomization study
Xiaotan Pan, Zhiyan Guo, Yin Zheng, Cheng Su, Jiabo Chen

TL;DR
This study uses genetic data to explore how 14 minerals and vitamins may affect kidney diseases called acute and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis.
Contribution
The study identifies vitamin B6 and vitamin D as having a genetic causal link to acute tubulointerstitial nephritis using Mendelian randomization.
Findings
Vitamin B6 and vitamin D show genetic causality with acute tubulointerstitial nephritis.
No genetic causality was found between the 14 minerals and vitamins and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis.
Vitamin B6 deficiency is linked to adverse effects on both acute and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis.
Abstract
To investigate the causal relationship between minerals and vitamins and acute and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis by Mendelian randomization. We selected fourteen minerals and vitamins from the GWAS database and acute tubulointerstitial nephritis and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis from the Finnish database. Minerals and vitamins were first analyzed by two-sample Mendelian randomization for acute and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis. The effects of minerals and vitamins on common acute and chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis were further explored by multivariate Mendelian randomization. among fourteen minerals and vitamins by two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis, there was genetic causality for vitamin B6 and vitamin D on acute tubulointerstitial nephritis, and the results were vitamin B6 (β = -0.641; P = 0.049; OR = 0.527; 95% CI: 0.278–0.998); vitamin D (β =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNephrotoxicity and Medicinal Plants · Renal Diseases and Glomerulopathies
