18/05/2026
Correlaration Between Asthma and Magnesium/Vitamin Deficiencies
Introduction
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory airway disease influenced by genetic, environmental, immunological, and nutritional factors. Increasing evidence suggests that deficiencies in magnesion and several vitamins contribute to asthma development, severity, poor symptom control, and reduced lung function through mechanisms involving oxidative stress, immune dysregulation, and airway inflammation.
Magnesium
Magnesium deficiency is consistently associated with increased asthma severity and frequent exacerbations. Magnesium supports bronchial smooth muscle relaxation and possesses anti-inflammatory and bronchodilatory properties. Low serum magnesium levels are frequently observed in both adult and paedriatic asthmatic patients and correlate with poorer pulmonary function.
Vitamin D
A deficiency in Vitamin D is strongly linked to severe, uncontrolled asthma and impaired immune regulation. Lower Vitamin D levels correlate with increased asthma severity, exacerbation frequency, and reduced lung function. As an immunomodulator, Vitamin D may reduce airway inflammation and improve responsiveness to therapy.
Vitamin C
This vitamin functions as a major antioxidant within pulmonary tissues, helping reduce oxidative airway damage and inflammatory responses. Asthmatic patients frequently demonstrate lower serum Vitamin C levels and inadequate dietary intake. deficiency has been associated with increased asthma prevalence and respiratory symptoms. Although supplementation studies show mixed outcomes, Vitamin C remains biologically relevant due to its protective role against airway oxidative injury.
Vitamin A
Vitamin A plays an essential role in respiratory epithelial integrity, immune regulation, and antioxidant defense. Reduced serum Vitamin A levels are commonly reported in asthmatic individuals and may increase susceptibility to wheezing and airway inflammation. Retinoic acid, the active form of Vitamin A, can modulate inflammatory cytokines and oxidative stress; howerver, both deficiency and excessive supplementation may negatively influence asthma outcomes, highlighting the importance of balanced intake.
B Vitamins
Certain B Vitamins, particularly folate (Vitamin B9) and Vitamin B6, may influence asthma through immune modulation, methylation pathways, and inflammatory regulation. Folate deficiency has been associated with allergic inflammation and increased asthma risk in some populations. Vitamin B6 supports immune function and magnesium utilisation, while Vitamin B3 derivatives influence oxidative metabolism and airway inflammatory pathways. evidence with Vitamin B12 remains inconclusive, with studies showing mixed associations.
Conclusion
Current evidence suppoerts a meaningful association between asthma and deficiencies in magnesium, Vitamins A, C, D, E, and selected B vitamins. These micronutrients appear to influence airway inflammation, oxidative stress, bronchial responsiveness, and immune function; all central mechanisms in asthma pathophysiology. Among them, magnesium and Vitamin D demonstrate the strongest clinical correlations with asthma severity and symptom control. Although nutritional supplementation shows therapeutic potential, further large-scale randomised clinical trials are needed to establish definitive causal relationships and evidence-based supplementation guidelines in asthma management.