Literature DB >> 10451461

A comparison of calcium, vitamin D, or both for nutritional rickets in Nigerian children.

T D Thacher1, P R Fischer, J M Pettifor, J O Lawson, C O Isichei, J C Reading, G M Chan.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nutritional rickets remains prevalent in many tropical countries despite the fact that such countries have ample sunlight. Some postulate that a deficiency of dietary calcium, rather than vitamin D, is often responsible for rickets after infancy.
METHODS: We enrolled 123 Nigerian children (median age, 46 months) with rickets in a randomized, double-blind, controlled trial of 24 weeks of treatment with vitamin D (600,000 U intramuscularly at enrollment and at 12 weeks), calcium (1000 mg daily), or a combination of vitamin D and calcium. We compared the calcium intake of the children at enrollment with that of control children without rickets who were matched for sex, age, and weight. We measured serum calcium and alkaline phosphatase and used a 10-point radiographic score to assess the response to treatment at 24 weeks.
RESULTS: The daily dietary calcium intake was low in the children with rickets and the control children (median, 203 mg and 196 mg, respectively; P=0.64). Treatment produced a smaller increase in the mean (+/-SD) serum calcium concentration in the vitamin D group (from 7.8+/-0.8 mg per deciliter [2.0+/-0.2 mmol per liter] at base line to 8.3+/-0.7 mg per deciliter [2.1+/-0.2 mmol per liter] at 24 weeks) than in the calcium group (from 7.5+/-0.8 [1.9+/-0.2 mmol per liter] to 9.0+/-0.6 mg per deciliter [2.2+/-0.2 mmol per liter], P<0.001) or the combination-therapy group (from 7.7+/-1.0 [1.9+/-0.25 mmol per liter] to 9.1+/-0.6 mg per deciliter [2.3+/-0.2 mmol per liter], P<0.001). A greater proportion of children in the calcium and combination-therapy groups than in the vitamin D group reached the combined end point of a serum alkaline phosphatase concentration of 350 U per liter or less and radiographic evidence of nearly complete healing of rickets (61 percent, 58 percent, and 19 percent, respectively; P<0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Nigerian children with rickets have a low intake of calcium and have a better response to treatment with calcium alone or in combination with vitamin D than to treatment with vitamin D alone.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Africa; Africa South Of The Sahara; Age Factors; Biology; Calcium; Child; Comparative Studies; Deficiency Diseases; Delivery Of Health Care; Demographic Factors; Developing Countries; Diseases; Double-blind Studies; English Speaking Africa; Food Supplementation; Health; Health Services; Metals; Micronutrients; Nigeria; Nutrition Disorders; Nutrition Programs; Physiology; Population; Population Characteristics; Primary Health Care; Research Methodology; Research Report; Studies; Treatment; Vitamins; Western Africa; Youth

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10451461     DOI: 10.1056/NEJM199908193410803

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  N Engl J Med        ISSN: 0028-4793            Impact factor:   91.245


  56 in total

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7.  Radiological and biochemical resolution of nutritional rickets with calcium.

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8.  Maternal vitamin D supplementation to improve the vitamin D status of breast-fed infants: a randomized controlled trial.

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Review 9.  Rickets: an overview and future directions, with special reference to Bangladesh. A summary of the Rickets Convergence Group meeting, Dhaka, 26-27 January 2006.

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Review 10.  Vitamin D and calcium insufficiency-related chronic diseases: an emerging world-wide public health problem.

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