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Foundation Sciences · Biochemistry

Fat-Soluble Vitamins

⏱️ 45–60 minutes read 📖 Biochemistry

Vitamins A, D, E, K — absorption requires bile, stored in liver/adipose; toxicity possible.

📌 Learning Objectives

  • Describe the key principles of fat-soluble vitamins.
  • Explain the clinical relevance of fat-soluble vitamins.
  • Recognise common conditions linked to fat-soluble vitamins in MLA-style scenarios.

📋 Overview

Vitamins A, D, E, K — absorption requires bile, stored in liver/adipose; toxicity possible. This topic integrates with pathology, pharmacology and clinical medicine and is frequently tested in UK medical school exams and the MLA.

🔬 Basic Science

Vitamins A, D, E, K — absorption requires bile, stored in liver/adipose; toxicity possible. Detailed mechanisms, regulation and molecular interactions underpin both normal physiology and disease.

🏥 Clinical Relevance

Malabsorption (cystic fibrosis, cholestasis); warfarin and vitamin K; isotretinoin teratogenicity.

🧪 Investigations

Relevant laboratory tests, imaging or histological examination are used as appropriate to the clinical context.

💊 Management

Management is condition-specific; principles include addressing the underlying biochemical/structural derangement, supportive care and targeted therapy where available.

Revision Resources – expand the sections below for high-yield notes, exam pearls, key facts and further reading.

🎯 MLA High-Yield Notes & Quick Revision
High-yield topic for the UK MLA — frequently appears in SBA questions linking biochemistry concepts to clinical presentations and management decisions.
Applying biomedical science to clinical practice Diagnosis and investigation Pathophysiology of common conditions
  • Vitamins A, D, E, K — absorption requires bile, stored in liver/adipose
  • toxicity possible.
Exam Pearls
⭐ High Yield
A: vision, epithelial integrity; teratogenic excess
D: Ca homeostasis
E: antioxidant; deficiency → haemolysis, neuropathy
K: γ-carboxylation of clotting factors II,VII,IX,X, C,S
💡 Clinical Pearl
: Malabsorption (cystic fibrosis, cholestasis); warfarin and vitamin K; isotretinoin teratogenicity.
⚠️ Exam Tip — Common Mistakes
Confusing fat-soluble vitamins with related but distinct mechanisms.
Memorising pathways without linking to clinical disease.
🔑 Key Facts
A: vision, epithelial integrity; teratogenic excess
D: Ca homeostasis
E: antioxidant; deficiency → haemolysis, neuropathy
K: γ-carboxylation of clotting factors II,VII,IX,X, C,S
📚 References
  1. BMJ Best Practice
  2. Robbins Basic Pathology
  3. Lippincott Illustrated Reviews: Biochemistry
  4. Wheater's Functional Histology
  5. NICE guidance where applicable.

Further Resources

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