| Literature DB >> 31557172 |
Fahmida Tofail1, M Munirul Islam1, Mustafa Mahfuz1, Md Ashraful Alam1, Shirina Aktar1, Rashidul Haque2, Md Iqbal Hossain1, Dinesh Mondal2, William A Petri3, Tahmeed Ahmed1.
Abstract
The association of vitamin D with neuro-behavioral outcomes of young children is unclear, particularly of those who reside in tropical countries and are otherwise exposed to adequate sun light. To investigate this association, we analysed the existing data of poor infants, who participated in an observational, prospective-cohort (MalED) study, conducted in a slum of Dhaka-city. We assessed 265 infants aged 6-8 months for cognitive, motor, language and behavior development using Bayley-III. Information about infants' temperament and communicative skills were provided by the mothers through a culturally modified "temperament-scale" and a "communicative-developmental inventory". Serum concentration of vitamin D [25(OH)D] was measured in 205 infants. Around 28.3% of infants in this community had low level vitamin D, with the cut-off at <50 nmol/L. After controlling for all possible covariates, a multivariable-adjusted linear regression showed that children with vitamin D levels <50 nmol/L had significantly lower scores in two dimensions of temperament: activity (B±SE 1.64±0.78; 95%CI 0.10, 3.18; p = 0.037; effect size 0.37 SDs) and soothabilty (2.02±0.70; 0.64, 3.41; p = 0.004; 0.53 SDs), compared to children with vitamin D levels of ≥50nmol/L. These infants also scored low in word comprehensions (1.28±0.62; 0.05, 2.51; p = 0.042; 0.23 SDs) and were less active during test-procedures (0.33±0.16; 0.02, 0.64; p = 0.035; 0.27 SDs). Both the groups tested similarly in cognitive and motor scores. This study found, despite adequate sunlight-exposure, one in four infants of this slum-community are suffering from a subclinical vitamin D deficiency. Higher levels of vitamin D in these infants showed a positive association with temperament, language and behavior but not with cognitive and motor development. Our findings highlight the early-detected extra-skeletal neuro-behavioral role of vitamin D. Future studies in this area will give more insight.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31557172 PMCID: PMC6762070 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Baseline characteristics of the study population (n = 205).
| Socio-demographic information | Mean ± SD or % |
|---|---|
| Monthly income ≤USD 70 | 23% |
| House with 1 room | 63% |
| Family size (>4 members) | 50% |
| Asset Index (range 1–13, higher is better) | 6.9±2.5 |
| Crowding Index (# of people/room) | 3.6±1.2 |
| Housing Index (range 13–23, higher is better) | 19.0±1.8 |
| Utility Index (4–9, higher is better) | 7.0±1.4 |
| Total HOME score | 33.7±4.1 |
| Mothers with schooling >5 years | 34.1% |
| Fathers with schooling >5 years | 27.8% |
| Water source (piped water in the yard) | 83% |
| Maternal age in year | 25 ± 5 |
| Parity one | 32% |
| Maternal body mass index (BMI) | 22.2±3.5 |
| Birth weight (kg) | 2.8 ± 0.4 |
| Age in months during assessments | 6.4±1.3 |
| Low birth weight <2.5 kg | 25% |
| Head circumference in cm at 7 months | 41.8±1.4 |
| Height- for- age z score between 7–8 months | -1.3±0.95 |
| Girl child | 52% |
Values are mean ± SD or %
HOME = Home observation of measuring environment; cm = Centimeter
Correlation of socio-demographic variables with Vitamin D level and outcome variable.
| N = 205 | Cognitive composite score | Language composite score | Social emotional composite score | Motor composite score | Language expression | Language compre-hension | Sociability score | Sooth-ability | Activity | Attention | Positive emotion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D nmol/L | -0.030.63 | -0.070.33 | 0.010.85 | -0.040.60 | -0.050.51 | 0.070.36 | 0.160.025 | 0.230.001 | 0.170.015 | 0.040.62 | 0.070.32 |
| ASSET Index | 0.090.21 | 0.100.14 | 0.150.04 | 0.14 0.04 | 0.120.10 | 0.16 0.021 | -0.070.33 | -0.140.04 | -0.060.39 | -0.150.03 | -0.020.76 |
| Housing Index | 0.080.27 | -0.0030.97 | -0.100.15 | 0.050.51 | 0.070.35 | -0.020.79 | 0.00 | 0.050.49 | -0.0040.95 | -0.010.88 | 0.060.37 |
| Utility Index | 0.110.14 | 0.020.77 | -0.080.27 | 0.060.39 | -0.040.54 | -0.020.83 | 0.090.19 | 0.020.77 | -0.130.08 | -0.030.66 | 0.030.63 |
| Mothers’ education (years in school) | 0.100.15 | 0.100.14 | 0.230.001 | 0.100.18 | 0.110.11 | 0.150.04 | -0.030.64 | -0.0060.93 | -0.040.59 | -0.100.14 | -0.0060.94 |
| Fathers’ education (years in school) | -0.050.58 | 0.090.31 | 0.060.51 | -0.090.29 | -0.020.87 | 0.050.55 | 0.150.03 | -0.030.77 | -0.110.20 | -0.130.16 | 0.040.70 |
| HOME score | -0.030.72 | 0.070.35 | 0.150.03 | 0.020.82 | 0.100.15 | 0.200.005 | -0.30<0.001 | -0.34<0.001 | -0.190.006 | -0.39<0.001 | -0.32<0.001 |
| Mothers’ age in years | 0.030.66 | 0.020.82 | -0.170.02 | 0.060.41 | -0.190.01 | -0.050.49 | 0.110.12 | 0.070.34 | 0.060.40 | 0.090.21 | 0.040.55 |
| Birth-weight (kg) | 0.20 0.005 | 0.100.15 | 0.010.92 | 0.26<0.001 | 0.160.03 | 0.090.22 | 0.080.24 | 0.040.62 | 0.040.55 | 0.0070.93 | -0.020.79 |
| Child’s age in months during test | 0.020.76 | -0.110.13 | 0.060.37 | -0.060.38 | -0.0080.92 | 0.030.67 | -0.100.15 | -0.070.32 | -0.050.46 | -0.150.04 | -0.080.23 |
| height- for- age Z score around 7-months | 0.150.04 | 0.0050.94 | 0.030.64 | 0.220.001 | 0.080.24 | 0.070.32 | 0.140.05 | 0.050.46 | 0.150.04 | -0.030.72 | 0.0050.94 |
| Head size around 7 months | 0.180.01 | 0.030.71 | 0.010.88 | 0.050.49 | 0.150.04 | 0.110.12 | 0.130.06 | 0.130.07 | 0.060.42 | 0.050.48 | 0.100.15 |
Bi-variate (Spearman’s) correlation, HOME = Home observation of measuring environment; BMI = Body mass index
1Values are in correlation co-efficient with p-values in superscript
*Values are log10 transformed for mild positive skeweness
Fig 1Distribution of vitamin D level in the population.
Distribution of cognitive, motor, language, temperament and behavioral scores of children by vitamin D deficient (< 50 nmol/L) and sufficient (≥ 50 nmol/L) group (unadjusted comparison).
| Vitamin D level | Vitamin D level | Group | |
|---|---|---|---|
| n = 58 | n = 147 | ||
| Cognitive composite score | 100.7±11.7 | 100.2±10.5 | 0.76 (-2.8 to 3.8) |
| Motor composite score | 99.3±12.7 | 97.8±12.4 | 0.47 (-2.4 to 5.2) |
| Language composite score | 93.7±11.2 | 91.7±11.2 | 0.26 (-1.5 to 5.4) |
| Social emotional composite score | 88.7±13.4 | 88.0±15.3 | 0.77 (-3.8 to 5.2) |
| Expressive language | 2.3±1.1 | 2.3±1.0 | 0.76 (-0.3 to 0.4) |
| Comprehensive language | 8.5±3.8 | 9.4±3.9 | 0.18 (-2.0 to 0.4) |
| Temperament–Activity | 13.6±5.2 | 15.4±4.8 | 0.02 (-3.4 to -0.3) |
| Temperament–Attention | 13.7±4.0 | 13.9±4.8 | 0.77 (-1.6 to 1.2) |
| Temperament–Negative Emotionality | 28.6±5.0 | 27.8±6.0 | 0.38 (-1.0 to 2.6) |
| Temperament–Positive Emotionality | 13.7±3.9 | 14.6±3.9 | 0.17 (-2.0 to 0.4) |
| Temperament- Sociability | 9.4±4.5 | 10.5±4.1 | 0.09 (-2.4 to 0.2) |
| Temperament- Soothability | 10.37±4.2 | 12.76±4.8 | 0.001(-3.8 to -1.0) |
| Approach of the child during test | 4.7±0.7 | 4.7±0.7 | 0.88 (-0.2 to 0.2) |
| Activity of the child during test | 5.0±1.0 | 5.2±1.0 | 0.07 (-0.6 to 0.02) |
| Emotion of the child during test | 5.2±0.7 | 5.2±0.9 | 0.57 (-0.3 to 0.2) |
| Cooperativeness of the child during test | 4.7±0.7 | 4.8±0.8 | 0.95 (-0.3 to 0.2) |
| Vocalization of the child during test | 2.5±1.2 | 2.8±1.4 | 0.16 (-0.7 to 0.1) |
Independent sample t test
*mean values of untransformed developmental outcome data
1Direct measurement on infants
2Mother’s report
3Observation during test
Multivariable-adjusted linear regression analysis showing infants’ developmental outcome scores by vitamin D deficient (<50 nmol/) and sufficient (≥50 nmol/) groups.
| Developmental Tests | B ±SE (95% CI) | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subtests | |||
| Bayley | - Cognitive composite score | -0.84±1.71 (-4.21, 2.52) | 0.62 |
| - Motor composite score | -0.65±1.97 (-4.54, 3.25) | 0.74 | |
| - Language composite score | -2.32±1.82 (-5.92, 1.27) | 0.20 | |
| - Socio-emotional composite score | -0.29±2.32(-4.88, 4.29) | 0.90 | |
| Temperament | - Activity | 1.64±0.78 (0.10, 3.18) | 0.037 |
| - Positive emotion | 0.51±0.58 (-0.64, 1.66) | 0.38 | |
| - Negative emotion | -0.75±0.94 (-2.61, 1.11) | 0.43 | |
| - Soothability | 2.02±0.70(0. 64, 3.41) | 0.004 | |
| - Soothability (log transformed) | 0.03±0.01(0. 008, 0.05) | 0.007 | |
| - Sociability | 0.85±0.63 (-0.38, 2.09) | 0.18 | |
| - Attention | -0.35±0.66 (-1.65,0.96) | 0.60 | |
| - Attention (log transformed) | -0.02±0.02 (-0.06,0.02) | 0.39 | |
| CDI | - Language comprehension | 1.28±0.62 (0.05, 2.51) | 0.042 |
| - Language expression | -0.02±0.17 (-0.32,0.36) | 0.91 | |
| Behavior | - Approach during test | 0.02±0.12 (-0.21, 0.25) | 0.86 |
| - Activity during test | 0.33±0.16 (0.02, 0.64) | 0.035 | |
| - Emotional tone during test | 0.10±0.14(-0.17, 0.38) | 0.45 | |
| - Cooperativeness during test | 0.06±0.12 (-0.18, 0.30) | 0.63 | |
| - Vocalization during test | 0.28± 0.21 (-0.14, 0.70) | 0.19 | |
Intervention effect B is the regression coefficient and SE is the Standard Error. Ranges shown are 95% CIs. Data were assessed in 58 infants in the vitamin D deficient (<50 nmol/L = 1) group versus 147 children in the vitamin D sufficient (≥50nmol = 2) group; these results were adjusted for the age of the child during assessment, asset score, maternal education, amount of stimulation received at home, height for age Z score (measured at the time of test between 7–8 months) and head circumference at 7 months