International Journal of General Medicine (Feb 2016)

Quality-of-life indicators and falls due to vitamin D deficiency

  • Cheema MR,
  • Chaudhry AY

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2016, no. Issue 1
pp. 21 – 25

Abstract

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Muhammad Raza Cheema, Ahmad Yar Chaudhry Department of Geriatrics, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire, NHS Hospitals, Coventry, UK Objective: To determine whether the number of falls and quality-of-life indicators relate to serum levels of vitamin D, parathyroid hormone (PTH), and calcium levels.Design: A prospective study.Participants: Patients being admitted with a fall with or without sustaining a fragility fracture post fall.Measurements: Measured frequency of falling, SF-12 questionnaire, serum concentrations of 25-hydroxyvitamin D, calcium, and PTH levels before and after treatment with vitamin D supplementation.Results: The mean age (N=38) of the cohort was 80.2±12. In all, 76.3% of the cohort had sustained a fragility fracture after the fall. The cohort was vitamin D deficient with the pretreatment mean value of 24.2±17 nmol/L and posttreatment mean value of 99±40 nmol/L with a statistically significant mean difference of 74.7 nmol/L (confidence interval [CI] 61.27–88.3), P=0.001. The levels of calcium and PTH were statistically significant after treatment with a mean difference of 0.16 (CI 0.1–0.2), P=0.001, and 3.7 (CI –4.8 to –2.5), P=0.001, respectively. After treatment, the mean difference of physical component score (PCS) and mental component score for the whole cohort was 2.9 (CI –0.69 to 6.6), P=0.10, and 1.05 (CI –2.6 to 4.7), P=0.56, respectively. However, a subgroup analysis for cohort aged ≤70 years provided a statistically significant effect on PCS with a mean difference of 8.9 (CI 1.3–16.4), P=0.03, but a statistically insignificant improvement in mental component score with a mean difference of 6.0 (CI –17 to –5.0), P=0.20. However, a statistically significant improvement in PCS SF-12 was observed in patients ≤70 years of age 2.9 (1.3–16.4), P=0.03. The mean number of falls for the whole cohort pre- and posttreatment was 1.11±0.92 vs 0.97±0.99 (P=0.68), respectively.Conclusion: Patients who had fallen and sustained fragility fracture had lower serum 25-dihydroxyvitamin D and higher serum PTH levels. Our study demonstrates that there is no statistically significant improvement in the number of falls after treatment with vitamin D. Overall, vitamin D levels improved significantly, this is despite quality-of-life indicators showing a mean increase in PCS but not a statistically significant improvement. However, statistically significant improvement in PCS was observed in group aged ≤70 years after vitamin D supplementation. Keywords: vitamin D, calcium, SF-12 questionnaire, parathyroid hormone

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