| Literature DB >> 26346815 |
Henry W Nabeta1, Josephine Kasolo2, Reuben K Kiggundu3, Agnes N Kiragga4, Sarah Kiguli5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vitamin D deficiency is a world-wide epidemic with recent estimates indicating that greater than 50% of the global population is at risk. In Uganda, 80% of healthy community children in a survey were found to be vitamin D insufficient. Protein-energy malnutrition is likely to be associated with vitamin D intake deficiency. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency and the associated factors among children admitted with protein-energy malnutrition to the pediatrics wards of Mulago hospital in Kampala, Uganda.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26346815 PMCID: PMC4562347 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-015-1395-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Socio-demographic factors, anthropometric and medical history of the study participants
| Characteristic | Non malnourished (n = 41) | Malnourished (n = 117) | Total (n = 158) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (months) | ||||
| 6–11 | 18 (43.9) | 51 (43.6) | 69 (43.7) | 0.865 |
| 12–17 | 10 (24.4) | 33 (28.2) | 43 (27.2) | |
| 18–24 | 13 (31.7) | 33 (28.2) | 46 (29.1) | |
| Gender | ||||
| Female | 19 (46.3) | 48 (41.0) | 67 (42.4) | 0.553 |
| Male | 22 (53.7) | 69 (59.0) | 91 (57.6) | |
| Median height (IQR) cm | ||||
| 6–11 months | 67.5 (61.0–68.0) | 67.0 (64.5–70.0) | 0.341 | |
| 12–17 months | 73.6 (72.4–77.5) | 70.0 (68.0–73.8) | ||
| 18–24 months | 81.5 (74.0–84.0) | 75.0 (72.0–77.5) | ||
| Median weight (IQR), kg | ||||
| 6–11 months | 7.9 (6.8–8.9) | 6.0 (5.5–7.2) | <0.001 | |
| 12–17 months | 10.0 (9.0–11.0) | 6.7 (6.0–7.0) | ||
| 18–24 months | 10.4 (95.0–12.0) | 8.0 (7.0–8.5) | ||
| Long standing illness in past 3 months | ||||
| Yes | 12 (29.3) | 52 (44.4) | 64 (44.8) | 0.027 |
| No | 28 (68.3) | 51 (43.6) | 79 (55.2) | |
| Feeding type | ||||
| Exclusive breast feeding | 4 (9.8) | 3 (2.6) | 7 (4.4) | 0.131 |
| Complimentary feeding | 19 (46.3) | 52 (44.4) | 71 (44.9) | |
| Only solid foods | 18 (43.9) | 62 (53.0) | 80 (50.6) | |
There were 117 malnourished and 41 non malnourished children. Twenty-two (53.7 %) of the non malnourished were male and 69 (59.0 %) of the malnourished were male. Non malnourished children aged 6–11 months had a median height of 67.5 cm (61.0–68.0) and a median weight of 7.9 kg (6.8–8.9). There were 52 (44.4 %) of the malnourished who were reported to have a history of a long standing illness in the 3 months prior to admission
Distribution of serum vitamin D levels, calcium and phosphate among the enrolled children
| Characteristic | Non malnourished n = 41 (%) | Malnourished n = 117 (%) | Total n = 158 (%) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D (ng/mL) | ||||
| <5 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0.689 |
| <10 | 1 (2.4) | 3 (2.6) | 4 (2.5) | |
| | 6 (14.6) | 14 (12.0) | 20 (12.7) | |
| 21–29 | 8 (19.5) | 34 (29.1) | 42 (26.6) | |
| ≥30 | 26 (63.4) | 66 (56.4) | 92 (58.2) | |
| Calcium (mmol/L) | ||||
| <2.20 | 26 (63.4) | 50 (43.5) | 76 (48.1) | 0.063 |
| 2.20–2.60 | 13 (31.7) | 61 (52.1) | 74 (46.8) | |
| >2.60 | 1 (2.5) | 4 (3.5) | 5 (3.2) | |
| Phosphate (mmol/L) | ||||
| <0.90 | 0 (0.0) | 7 (6.0) | 7 (4.4) | 0.000 |
| 0.90–1.50 | 1 (2.4) | 51 (43.6) | 52 (32.9) | |
| >1.50 | 40 (97.6) | 58 (49.6) | 98 (62.0) | |
Twenty-six (63.4 %) of the non malnourished children and 66 (56.4 %) of the malnourished had normal serum vitamin D levels. Twenty-six (63.4 %) of the non malnourished and 50 (43.5 %) had low serum calcium levels. Forty (97.6 %) of the non malnourished and 58 (49.6 %) of the malnourished had elevated serum phosphate levels
Fig. 1Box plot of the admission diagnoses and vitamin D levels amongst the malnourished children. The median (IQR) serum vitamin D level was 36.5 (IQR 29, 42) ng/mL among children admitted with pneumonia. The mean (SD) was 36.3 ± 11.8 ng/mL. There were three outlier; one child admitted with pneumonia with elevated vitamin D levels of >60 ng/mL, one child admitted with meningitis with levels >40 ng/mL and one with serum vitamin D levels <20 ng/mL