
Vitamin-D Level in Patients with Type-2 Diabetes Mellitus of different Age and Sex: its Effects on BMI, Calcium Level
Author(s) -
Zarghuna Khan,
Munazza Khan,
S. Asath Bahadur,
Zafaruddin Khan,
Yasir Khan,
Hina Umair,
Sahibzada Saeed Jan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of saidu medical college
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1819-4583
DOI - 10.52206/jsmc.2020.10.1.285
Subject(s) - medicine , vitamin d and neurology , diabetes mellitus , body mass index , type 2 diabetes mellitus , vitamin d deficiency , blood sugar , outpatient clinic , type 2 diabetes , calcium , endocrinology
Background: Type II diabetes is one of vital health problems in Pakistan. Type 2 diabetic patients are more prone to developVitamin-D deficiency and hypocalcaemia however, the effect of age, sex, ethnicity, BMI and socioeconomic status also has a role inaffecting the outcomes. The aim of this study was to compare Vitamin-D level in patients with type-2 Diabetic Mellitus of differentage and sex and to determine the association of vitamin-D level with BMI, calcium and blood sugar level.Objectives: The main objective of this study was to determine and compare the changes in Vitamin- D and serum calcium level inpatients with type- 2 diabetes mellitus with respect to their Body Mass Index (BMI), age, sex and ethnic groups.Material and Methods: This was a cross-sectional analytical study, carried out in the outpatient department of endocrine unit ofHayatabad Medical Complex, Pakistan from 1st July 2018 to 31st august 2018. Using convenient sampling technique, patients withknown cases of Type II diabetes mellitus of all age groups, regardless of gender, ethnic group were consented to be part of thestudy. Patients taking vitamin D and calcium supplements and patients with renal and liver diseases were excluded. For vitamin Dand Calcium concentration 5 ml blood was taken. Data was recorded on a structured Proforma and entered into SPSS version22.0. For comparison student's t-test was used while Pearson correlation was used for determining the association betweenvitamin-D, BMI, blood sugar level and calcium concentration, where P-value <0.05 was considered as significant.Results: A total of 238 individuals with mean age of 51.24 ± 7.7 out of whom 103(49.2%) were males and 121(50.8%) werefemales. The mean vitamin-D concentration was 17.86 ± 15.3 ng/ml and mean calcium level was 8.50 ± 0.6 mg/dL respectively.Regarding vitamin D deficiency males were more affected as compared to females (p=0.04). However in case of calciumconcentration there was no significant difference (p=0.17). The relationship observed between blood sugar level and vitamin D wasweakly inverse (r =-0.035, P = 0.5). However the inverse relationship of sugar level and calcium was significant (r=-0.135, p=0.01).Conclusion: Type-II diabetes mellitus leads may lead to low calcium levels where males are more prone to be affected. Thiscondition aggravates with increase in age. This study basically concludes that vitamin-D deficiency in inversely associated withtype-2 diabetes.