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Hypovitaminosis D Linked to Tuberculosis Infection in Children

27.05.2014 08:05
Hypovitaminosis D Linked to Tuberculosis Infection in Children
| May 09, 2014
 
FRIDAY, May 9, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Hypovitaminosis D is associated with tuberculosis infection in children, according to a study presented at the annual meeting of the European Society for Paediatric Infectious Diseases, held from May 6 to 10 in Dublin.
 
Elisabetta Venturini, MD, from the University of Florence in Italy, and colleagues examined serum vitamin D levels in children with latent and active tuberculosis in a multicenter observational study conducted in three pediatric centers in Italy and the United Kingdom. Participants included 996 children screened for tuberculosis who had undergone vitamin D measurements.
 
The researchers found that 4.4 percent of the children had active tuberculosis, 13.9 percent had latent tuberculosis, and 81.7 percent were controls. The prevalence of hypovitaminosis D was 47 percent overall, 58 percent in the latent tuberculosis group, and 75 percent in the active tuberculosis group (P < 0.0001). In multivariate analysis, the risk of hypovitaminosis D was increased for children with latent and active tuberculosis, compared with controls (relative risk, 1.61 and 4.587, respectively).
 
"[These] data should alert the physicians about the need of vitamin D supplementation in children with low vitamin D status, since this is also important to prevent rickets -- another disease that has recently reemerged in developed countries," Venturini said in a statement.
 
- See more at: https://www.hcplive.com/articles/Hypovitaminosis-D-Linked-to-Tuberculosis-Infection-in-Children#sthash.bulg4wtA.dpuf