Vitamin D - An Elixir for Recurrent Upper Respiratory Tract Infection.
Study Design
- Jenis Studi
- Case-Control
- Populasi
- None
- Durasi
- 26.0 weeks
- Intervensi
- Vitamin D - An Elixir for Recurrent Upper Respiratory Tract Infection. 98%
- Pembanding
- control
- Luaran Utama
- None
- Arah Efek
- Mixed
- Risiko Bias
- Unclear
Abstract
AIM: The aim of this study was to assess and compare the level of serum vitamin-D in participants affected with recurrent upper respiratory tract infections and in healthy population and to know whether vitamin-D deficiency is factor contributing to recurrent upper respiratory tract infections (URTI). MATERIALS AND METHODS: A case control study was conducted on 52 subjects with recurrent URTI and 52 controls. Frequency and severity of infections in the previous 6 months were assessed and documented among the case group. Vitamin D level was assessed in all the participants among case and control group and statistical analysis was done. RESULTS: Mean serum vitamin D was 10.67 ± 3.58 ng/mL in the study group and 20.10 ± 7.73 ng/mL in the control group, the difference in value was statistically significant. None of the study group participants belonged to vitamin D sufficient group, and majority (98%) were in vitamin D deficient, except for 2% who were in insufficient group. In the control group, 10%,29%,61% were in sufficient, insufficient and deficient group respectively. Mean serum vitamin D was not significantly associated with severity and type of infection. CONCLUSION: Significant number of participants in both study and control had serum vitamin D deficiency. This study also observed that a significant number of participants with recurrent URTI had serum vitamin D deficiency than the control group which suggest that hypovitaminosis D is a factor contributing to recurrent URTI. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12070-022-03220-z.
TL;DR
It is observed that a significant number of participants with recurrent URTI had serum vitamin D deficiency than the control group which suggest that hypovitaminosis D is a factor contributing to recurrent U RTI.
Used In Evidence Reviews
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