| Literature DB >> 34550211 |
Ana B J da Silva1,2, Taciane S do Carmo2, Ana P S Souza1,2, Mariluce R M Silva1,2, Matheus S S Fernandes1, Viviane O N Souza3, Waleska M A Barros1,2.
Abstract
This review aims to investigate the different levels of vitamin D and its role in muscle strength in healthy children and non-athletes. A search conducted in three databases (PubMed, Scopus, and Psycinfo) resulted in 655 articles, which were systematically analyzed and selected based on the following criteria: (a) original cross-sectional studies and clinical trials; (b) healthy children aged 5-11 years; (c) no language restriction or year of publication; and (d) studies that assessed the possible relationship between vitamin D levels and muscle strength. Six studies were included because they met all the inclusion criteria. According to the findings of this review, factors such as sex, skin color, and vitamin D supplementation early in life modulate the levels of vitamin D in the body, and there is a relationship between muscle strength and vitamin D levels. Interestingly, vitamin D supplementation is not always significantly associated with increased muscle grip strength. However, there is a scarcity of studies that aim to analyze the possible effects of different levels of vitamin D on muscle function and neuromuscular variables in physically inactive children and non-athletes without previously diagnosed disease. Further studies are warranted in the future to address the gap in the literature.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34550211 PMCID: PMC8420842 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2021/e3200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Figure 1Flowchart of bibliographic research and selection of studies for this systematic review according to PRISMA.
Figure 2Risk of bias summary: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study.
Figure 3Risk of bias graph: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
Descriptions of the studies included in this systematic review: author and year, country, type of study, number of participants, sample size and age of participants, and sex.
| Author, year | Country | Type of study | Number of participants | Sample size, n/age, years | Sex | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Male | |||||
| Wright et al. ( | United States of America | Clinical trial | 324 | 323/11.3±1.2 | 162 | 162 |
| Bozsodi et al. ( | Hungary | Cross-sectional study | 706 | 706/9.8±1.2 | 346 | 360 |
| Filteau et al. ( | India | Cross-sectional study | 912 | 902/5.0±1.0 | 478 | 434 |
| Mortensen et al. ( | Denmark | Clinical trial | 130 | 130/6.6±1.5 | 69 | 61 |
| Trilok-Kumar et al. ( | India | Cross-sectional study | 912 | 912/5.0±1.0 | 475 | 437 |
| Al-Jwadi et al. ( | Denmark | Observational study | 881 | 881/5.0±0.06 | 432 | 449 |
Descriptions of the studies included in the systematic review: author and year, measurement of vitamin D and muscle strength, vitamin D level results, vitamin D supplementation, and muscle strength status.
| Author, year | Measurement | Vitamin D level results | Vitamin D supplementation | Muscle strength status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D | Muscle strength | ||||
| Wright et al. ( | Blood samples after an overnight fast. Serum 25OHD was evaluated using a two-step radioimmunoassay. | Digital dynamometer. | Before intervention in 318 participants: 69.9±18.5 nmol/L. | Oral dose of vitamin D3 of 0, 400, 1000 or 4000 IU/day. | Handgrip strength before intervention in 288 participants: 176.52±93.16 N. |
| Bozsodi et al. ( | For genotyping, saliva samples were analyzed using the Orange OG-500 kit. | - | Six candidates for single nucleotide polymorphisms were identified: A1012G, Fokl, Ddel, Bsml, Taql, and rs10783215. | Without intervention. | Handgrip strength in 706 participants: dominant hand strength 147.5±42.1 N. |
| Filteau et al. ( | Radioimmunoassay duplicate using a DiaSorin kit and an external standard (vitamin D external Quality Assessment Scheme, DEQAS). | Custom dynamometer. | 902 participants: 32.7±23.0 nmol/L. | Without intervention. | Handgrip strength in 830 participants: 24.41±9.12 N. |
| Mortensen et al. ( | A 25 mL venous sample of blood was collected after 2 to 4h of fasting. The 25OHD serum was analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry liquid chromatography. | Manual dynamometer. | 117 participants: 56.1±12.8 nmol/L. | Vitamin D3 supplementation was performed for 20 weeks. | Mean peak strength for the placebo group before the intervention: 92.18±4.9 N. |
| Trilok-Kumar et al. ( | Serum OHD duplicate in radioimmunoassay using a Diasorin kit. An external standard (DEQAS). | Custom design dynamometer. | 436 participants who supplemented vitamin D early in life: 32.0 nmol/L. | Without intervention. | Early intervention group of vitamin D in 405 participants: 24.71±8.72 N. |
| Al-Jwadi et al. ( | 25OHD serum levels were analyzed by liquid chromatography mass spectrometry. | Digital hand Dynamometer. | 499 participants: 70.73±24.48 nmol/L. | Without intervention. | 881 participants: 82.76±16.96 N. |
Caption: 25(OH)D: 25-hydroxyvitamin D.