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Prevalence of Vitamin D Deficiency and its Relation with Bone Mineral Density in HIV/AIDS Patients
Author(s) -
Ramazan Korkusuz,
Özlem Altuntaş Aydın,
Hayat Kumbasar Karaosmanoğlu,
Yasemin Erdoğan Döventaş,
Rıdvan Karahasanoğlu,
Özcan Nazlıcan
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
turkish journal of osteoporosis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.108
H-Index - 5
ISSN - 2146-3816
DOI - 10.4274/tod.10337
Subject(s) - medicine , gynecology , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , bone mineral , immunology , osteoporosis
Aim: In addition to immune regulation, vitamin D has the most important role in bone health. We aimed to investigate the prevalence of vitamin\udD deficiency and its relation with bone mineral density (BMD) in HIV-infected patients.\udMaterials and Methods: Ninety-six HIV/AIDS patients were analyzed between April-November 2011. Age, gender, antiretroviral treatment, CD4\udcell count, HIV-RNA, BMD, 25(OH)D measurement of patients were collected retrospectively from medical records. Plasma 25(OH)D level was\udmeasured by chemiluminescence immunoassay and were assigned to be deficient, insufficient and sufficient, <25 nmol/ml, 25-50 nmol/ml and\ud>50nmol/ml, respectively. The patients were diagnosed as osteopenic, osteoporotic or normal by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry measurements\udaccording to World Health Organization criteria. Analyses were performed using SPSS version 13.0.\udResults: Median age was 40.1 years (range, 20-70), 82% were male, mean plasma HIV-RNA was 5.2±1.0 log10 copies/ml and CD4 lymphocyte\udwas 440.9±215.7/mm3, 80.2% were treated with antiretroviral agents. Of total 15% had deficient, 69% had insufficient 25(OH)D levels.\udOsteopenia and osteoporosis were diagnosed in 50% and 26%, respectively. No interrelation between osteopenia/osteoporosis and 25(OH)D levels\udwas shown statistically (p=0.283).\udConclusion: Whereas no interrelation between osteopenia+osteoporosis and 25(OH)D levels was shown statistically, vitamin D deficiency was\udtwice more in osteopenia+osteoporosis group than in BMD normal group. Review of bone health should become part of routine care for all HIVinfected\udpatients to prevent fractures. (Turkish Journal of Osteoporosis 2012;18: 78-80

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