| Literature DB >> 33406811 |
Fatemeh Abdi1, Marjan Akhavan Amjadi2, Farzaneh Zaheri3, Fatemeh Alsadat Rahnemaei4.
Abstract
Dysmenorrhea is one of the well-established problems among women of reproductive age and can have adverse effects on the quality of life of the individual. Some studies suggest a relationship between vitamin D (Vit D) and calcium deficiency and the emergence of early dysmenorrhea. Accordingly, a systematic study was performed to investigate the role of calcium and Vit D in the relief of primary dysmenorrhea. A systematic literature search was performed in PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, Science Direct, and Google Scholar for papers published between 2010 and 2020. The Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials and Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology checklists were used to assess the quality of the studies. The risk of bias was assessed using the Cochrane risk-of-bias assessment tool. Low calcium levels lead to an increase in uterine muscle contraction and can cause pain after decreased uterine blood flow. Furthermore, low levels of Vit D can increase primary dysmenorrhea by increasing prostaglandin production or reducing intestinal calcium absorption. That being the case, Vit D and calcium intake can be effective in reducing the severity of primary dysmenorrhea and in reducing the rate of analgesic use. Low levels of Vit D and calcium are inversely related to the severity of primary dysmenorrhea, and Vit D and calcium intake can reduce the severity of primary dysmenorrhea and its associated systemic symptoms. Therefore, the use of calcium and Vit D supplements can be recommended to relieve dysmenorrhea.Entities:
Keywords: Calcium; Primary dysmenorrhea; Vitamin D
Year: 2021 PMID: 33406811 PMCID: PMC7834752 DOI: 10.5468/ogs.20205
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obstet Gynecol Sci ISSN: 2287-8572
Search strategy
| Search | Search term |
|---|---|
| #1 | ‘Primary dysmenorrhea’ [tiab], OR ‘Menstrual Pain’ [tiab], OR ‘Painful Menstruation’ [tiab] |
| #2 | ‘Vitamin D’ [tiab], OR ‘Cholecalciferol’ [tiab], OR ‘Hydroxycholecalciferols’ [tiab], OR ‘Vitamin D3’ [tiab], OR ‘25-Hydroxyvitamin D3’ [tiab] |
| #3 | ‘Calcium’ [tiab], OR ‘Ca’ [tiab] |
| #1 AND #2 | |
| #1 AND #3 | |
| #1 AND #2 AND #3 |
Population, Intervention, Comparators, Outcomes, and Study Design (PICOS) criteria for this study
| Criteria | Description |
|---|---|
| Population | All women of childbearing age |
| Intervention | The VAS and NRS scales |
| Comparison | The higher VAS scale vs. the lower VAS scale |
| Outcome | Relationship between pain intensity and vitamin D |
| Study design | Cross sectional, case control, quasi experiment, RCT |
VAS, visual analogue scale; NRS, numeric rating scale; RCT, randomized clinical trial.
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the search strategy.
Risk of bias summary: authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study
| Reference | Domains | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Selection bias | Performance bias | Detection bias | Attrition bias | Reporting bias | |
| Pakniat et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Ayşegül et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Lama et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Kucukceran et al. [ | − | + | − | + | + |
| Bahrami et al. [ | − | ? | − | + | + |
| Zarei et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Mehrpooya et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Charandabi et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Fareena Begum et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Moini et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Ataee et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Zangene et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
| Lasco et al. [ | + | + | + | + | + |
+, low risk of bias; −, high risk of bias; ?, unknown bias.
Characteristics of the studies included in the systematic review
| Author | Region | Design | Sample size | Age (yr) | Menarche age (yr) | BMI (kg/m2) | Duration of each menstrual dysmenorrhea (day) | Duration of menstruation cycle (day) | Intervention | Control | Pain intensity | Serum level of Vit D | Assessment tools | Definition | Results | Quality | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Baseline | After | Baseline | After | |||||||||||||||
| Rahnemaie et al. [ | Iran | Cross sectional | 143 | 22.52±2.97 | 13.46±1.03 | 23.53±3.70 | 2.43±1.32 | NR | - | - | 6.91±1.59 | - | 24.45±11.85 ng/mL | - | VAS | ≥4 | Not significant | 21 |
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| Zeynali et al. [ | Iran | Cross sectional | 372 | 22.40±2.01 | 13.21±1.44 | 24.03±3.07 | 2.18±1.04 | 6.09±1.11 | - | - |
24.73% severe 53.22% moderate 22.04% mild | - |
37.09% insufficiency 36.55% moderate deficiency 26.34% severe deficiency | - | VAS | ≥1 | Significant | 20 |
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| Karacin et al. [ | Turkey | Case control | 368 | 20.80 | 12.15 | 22.26 | NR | 5.1 | - | - | 7.30±1.40 | - | 7.10±3.80 ng/mL | - | VAS | 1–10 | Significant | 20 |
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| Abdul- Razzak et al. [ | Jordan | Cross sectional | 56 | 21.90±2.76 | 13.60±1.40 | NR | NR | NR | - | - |
60.7% very severe: 8.73±1.00 39.3% severe: 7.53±1.23 | - |
9% deficient 80% insufficient 11% normal | - | NRS | 0–10 | Not significant | 19 |
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| Kucukceran et al. [ | Turkey | Quasi experiment | 100 | 20.50 | 13.13 | 21.42 | 2.33 | 5.86 |
Insufficient (21–29 ng/mL): 8–7 drops of Vit D3/day Deficient (10–20 ng/mL): 15–9 drops of Vit D3/day Severely deficient (<10 ng/mL): 16–23 drops of Vit D3/day | 7.00±2.00 | 4.10±1.60 | 13.90±6.10 | 31.10±3.90 | VAS | 0–10 | Significant | 18 | |
| Duration: 2 mon | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Bahrami et al. [ | Iran | Quasi experiment | 897 | 14.72±1.50 | 12.57±1.19 | NR | NR | 71.8% normal cycle | High-dose Vit D supplements (as 50,000 IU/wk of cholecalciferol) | - |
9.5% mild 20.8% moderate 18.1% severe 12.3% very severe 8.1% worst |
11% mild 19% moderate 16.2% severe 9% very severe 7.8% worst | 22.70±22.60 nmol/mL | 89.90±38.30 nmol/mL | VIPS | 0–5 | Significant | 18 |
| Duration: 1 capsule over 9 wk | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Pakniat et al. [ | Iran | RCT | 200 | 22.44±1.92 | 12.55±1.00 | 21.62±3.15 | 2.60±0.89 | 5.20±0.95 |
Ginger capsules500 mg per day+mefenamic acid 250 mg capsule 1,000 mg Vit D+mefenamic acid 250 mg 100- unit Vit E+mefenamic acid 250 mg | Placebo+ mefenamic acid 250 mg | 7.13±0.80 | 4.93±1.48 | - | - | VAS | 0–10 | Significant | 22 |
| Drop on: 2 day before the onset of menstrual flow | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Ayşegül et al. [ | Turkey | RCT | 142 | 22.00 | 23.40±5.60 | NR | NR | NR |
667 UI of Vit D/day 200 IU of Vit E/day |
400 mg ibuprofen twice a day | 8.50±1.20 | 4.90±2.40 | - | - | VAS | 1–10 | Vit D more significant | 20 |
| Drop on: 2 days before the expected date of menstruation | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Lama et al. [ | Saudi Arabia | RCT | 22 | 13–40 | NR | NR | NR | NR | 50,000 IU Vit D/wk+their usual analgesics regimen | Their usual analgesics regimen | 7.80 | 3.60 | 30.10±13.40 nmol/L | 80.20±14.30 nmol/L | VAS | 0–10 | Significant | 20 |
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| Zarei et al. [ | Iran | RCT | 85 | 23.66 | 13.10 | 21.83 | NR | NR |
1,000 mg of calcium carbonate+5,000 units of Vit D/day 1,000 mg of calcium carbonate/day | Placebo |
Ca+Vit D: 7.7±1.2 Ca: 7.7±1.3 |
Ca+Vit D: 5.0±2.6 Ca: 3.9±2.5 | NR | NR | VAS | 0–10 | Significant for calcium | 22 |
| Drop on: from 15th cycle day | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Mehrpooya et al. [ | Iran | RCT | 80 | 25.24 | NR | 23.16 | NR | 5.80 |
Ibuprofen 400 mg as needed plus 1,000 mg omega-3 |
Ibuprofen 400 mg as needed plus 1,000 mg calcium |
Omega-3: 6.67+1.80 Calcium: 7.50+2.70 |
Omega-3: 2.30+0.63 Calcium: 3.20+1.50 | - | - | VAS | ≥4 | Significant | 20 |
| Drop on: every day in the first cycle and 8 day of second and third cycle | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Charandabi et al. [ | Iran | RCT | 61 | 21.00±2.20 | 12.60 | 22.30±3.00 | NR | 6.2 |
300 mg magnesium+600 mg calcium carbonate 600 mg calcium carbonate | Placebo |
Ca+Mg: 6.00±2.30 Ca: 5.20±2.00 |
Ca+Mg: 3.90±2.10 Ca: 4.20±2.00 | - | - | VAS | ≥5 | Significant | 20 |
| Drop on: 1 pill a day, from the day 15th of their cycle | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Fareena Begum et al. [ | India | RCT | 50 | 21.18 | 62% earlier onset of menarche |
88% normal 12% overweight | NR | NR |
Single oral dose of Vit D3 3,00,000 | Placebo | 8.76±0.97 | 3.56±0.76 | 17.84±10.1 ng/mL | 34.70±8.10 ng/mL | VAS | 0–10 | Significant | 22 |
| Followed up: for the next 2 and 4 mon | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Moini et al. [ | Iran | RCT | 50 | 26.36 | 12.72 | 22.95 | NR | NR | 50,000 IU oral vit D/wk | Placebo | 7.80 | 2.80 | 9.69±5.09 ng/mL | 55.44±6.02 ng/mL | VAS | 0–10 | Significant | 22 |
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| Ataee et al. [ | Iran | RCT | 54 | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR |
Single high dose of oral cholecalciferol (300 000 IU) | Placebo | 7.53±1.85 | 3.77±1.77 | 7.28±3.64 ng/mL | - | VAS | 0–10 | Significant | 22 |
| Drop on: 5 day before the beginning of menstruation | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Zangene et al. [ | Iran | RCT | 54 | 22.43 | NR | 21.03 | NR | NR |
Single high dose of oral cholecalciferol (300 000 IU) | Placebo | 7.53±1.85 | 3.77±1.78 | 7.37 ng/mL | NR | VAS | 0–10 | Significant | 20 |
| Drop on: 5 day before menstruation | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Lasco et al. [ | Italy | RCT | 40 | 26.65 | NR | 21.56 | NR | NR | Single oral dose of cholecalciferol (300,000 IU/1 mL | Placebo | 5.85±2.00 | 3.50±1.27 | 27.19±7.53 ng/mL | - | VAS | 0–10 | Significant | 22 |
| Drop on: 5 day before the putative beginning of their next menstrual cycle | ||||||||||||||||||
BMI, body mass index; Vit, vitamin; VAS, visual rating scale; NRS, numeric rating scale; RCT, randomized clinical trial; NR, not reported; VIPS, verbal intensity pain scale.
By Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE);
By Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT).