Literature DB >> 20702752

Vitamin D status of Inuit preschoolers reflects season and vitamin D intake.

Jessy El Hayek1, Grace Egeland, Hope Weiler.   

Abstract

Rickets ascribed to hypovitaminosis D remains a public health concern among Aboriginal children in Canada and the United States. Our primary objective in this study was to investigate the prevalence and risk factors (gender, age, vitamin D intake, and socioeconomic status) for low vitamin D status of Inuit preschoolers living in 16 Arctic communities (51(o)N-70(o)N) and participating in the 2007-2008 Nunavut Child Inuit Health Survey. Children were selected randomly in summer (n = 282) and a follow-up was performed in winter for a subsample (n = 52). Dietary intake was assessed through the administration of a 24-h dietary recall and a FFQ. Anthropometric measurements (height, weight) were assessed. Plasma 25-hydroxy vitamin D was measured using a chemiluminescent assay (Liaison, Diasorin). Prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency (<75 nmol/L) among preschoolers was 78.6% and 96.8% in summer and winter, respectively. Median vitamin D concentrations and interquartile ranges in summer and winter were 48.3 (32.8-71.3) and 37.7 (21.4-52.0) nmol/L, respectively. The prevalence of vitamin D deficiency < 25 and < 37.5 nmol/L was 13.6 and 36.5%, respectively. Children who met or exceeded the adequate intake, those who consumed 2 or more milk servings (1 serving = 250 mL), and those who lived in households without crowding (47.7%) had a better vitamin D status than those who did not. The predictors of vitamin D status were dietary intake and age. Given low traditional food consumption and low consumption of milk, interventions promoting vitamin D supplementation may be required.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20702752     DOI: 10.3945/jn.110.124644

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nutr        ISSN: 0022-3166            Impact factor:   4.798


  25 in total

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4.  Association of Maternal Vitamin D Deficiency with Early Childhood Caries.

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5.  Declines in traditional marine food intake and vitamin D levels from the 1960s to present in young Alaska Native women.

Authors:  Diane M O'Brien; Kenneth E Thummel; Lisa R Bulkow; Zhican Wang; Brittany Corbin; Joseph Klejka; Scarlett E Hopkins; Bert B Boyer; Thomas W Hennessy; Rosalyn Singleton
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6.  Prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency among healthy school-age Cree children.

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7.  Vitamin D deficiency among northern Native Peoples: a real or apparent problem?

Authors:  Peter Frost
Journal:  Int J Circumpolar Health       Date:  2012-03-19       Impact factor: 1.228

8.  Higher body mass, older age and higher monounsaturated fatty acids intake reflect better quantitative ultrasound parameters in Inuit preschoolers.

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Review 9.  Breast cancer in the Arctic--changes over the past decades.

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10.  Vitamin D in a northern Canadian first nation population: dietary intake, serum concentrations and functional gene polymorphisms.

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