Literature DB >> 11846328

Longitudinal evaluation of vitamin D status in healthy subjects from southern Italy: seasonal and gender differences.

V Carnevale1, S Modoni, M Pileri, A Di Giorgio, I Chiodini, S Minisola, R Vieth, A Scillitani.   

Abstract

Vitamin D status is currently considered among the relevant determinants of skeletal integrity. Since vitamin D levels present seasonal variations, we longitudinally studied young healthy men and women in order to investigate the related physiologic modifications of both calcium homeostasis and bone remodeling. Thirty-two men (mean age 39.4 +/- 7.8 years) and 58 premenopausal women (aged 36.9 +/- 6.4 years) from southern Italy were studied. In all subjects the following parameters were measured both in winter and in summer: serum calcium, phosphorus, creatinine, total alkaline phosphatase activity, 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD), parathyroid hormone (PTH), osteocalcin (BGP), together with urinary calcium (Ca/Cr), total pyridinoline (Pyr/Cr) and deoxypyridinoline (d-Pyr/Cr), corrected for creatinine excretion. In both sexes 25OHD levels were significantly higher in summer, while PTH values were lower, than in winter. The prevalence of hypovitaminosis D, defined by concentrations of 25OHD lower than 30 nmol/l, was 17.8% in winter and 2.2% in summer in the whole sample, while it was 27.8% and 3.4%, respectively, among female subjects. Indeed male subjects did not display hypovitaminosis D, having throughout the year significantly higher calcium and 25OHD levels together with lower PTH values, than the women. Moreover, alkaline phosphatase total activity was more elevated in men both in winter and in summer. In women, during winter, bone remodeling markers levels were higher while urinary calcium levels were lower than in summer. In the whole sample serum 25OHD correlated positively with serum calcium and inversely with PTH. The seasonal percentage variations in PTH were inversely correlated with those of Ca/Cr. Our results show a relatively high prevalence of subclinical vitamin D deficiency among young healthy women from southern Italy. Significant gender-specific differences have been demonstrated in both calcium homeostasis and skeletal remodeling indexes; the seasonal fluctuations in the vitamin D-PTH axis are accompanied by cyclical variations of bone turnover rate, which were more pronounced in women.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11846328     DOI: 10.1007/s001980170012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Osteoporos Int        ISSN: 0937-941X            Impact factor:   4.507


  55 in total

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