The association between serum vitamin D and mood disorders in a cohort of lipedema patients
Author:
Al-Wardat Mohammad1, Alwardat Nuha2, Lou De Santis Gemma3, Zomparelli Samantha3, Gualtieri Paola2, Bigioni Giulia4, Romano Lorenzo3, Di Renzo Laura2
Affiliation:
1. Department of Allied Medical Science , Division of Physical Therapy, Aqaba University of Technology , Aqaba , Jordan 2. Department of Biomedicine and Prevention , Section of Clinical Nutrition and Nutrigenomic, University of Rome “Tor Vergata” , Rome , Italy 3. School of Specialization in Food Sciences, University of Rome “Tor Vergata” , Rome , Italy 4. Department of Physics , University of Rome Sapienza , Rome , Italy
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
The association between serum Vitamin D (Vit. D) and mood disorders in lipedema patients has not been investigated. Therefore, the main aim of this study is to investigate the correlation between serum Vit. D, depression and anxiety risk.
Methods
A cross-sectional cohort of lipedema patients were investigated by collecting the clinical and demographic data. The Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D) and the Hamilton of Anxiety Scale (HAM-A) were used to evaluating the risk of depression and anxiety. Serum concentrations of Vit. D were measured. The association between Vit. D levels and both HAM-A and HAM-D scores were statistically examined by bivariate and partial correlations.
Results
Forty lipedema patients were enrolled in this study. Around two-thirds of them had a higher depression or anxiety risk, and 77.5% were under the normal serum Vit. D levels. A significant and inverse correlation was observed between serum Vit. D levels and both HAM-D (r=−0.661, p<0.001), and HAM-A (r=−0.496, p=0.001) scores. This strong association was sustained after the statistical model adjusted for the main potential confounding factors (age, body mass index (BMI), disease duration, and lipedema stages). Additionally, serum Vit. D correlated significantly and inversely with BMI (r=−0.647, p<0.001). Moreover, BMI significantly correlated with HAM-D: r=0.560, p<0.001, and HAM-A: r=0.511, p=0.00.
Conclusions
This study suggests a strong correlation between Vit. D levels, depression scores, and anxiety scores in lipedema patients. Our results also demonstrate a strong and direct relationship between BMI, Vit. D levels, depression, and anxiety.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Endocrinology,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Reference28 articles.
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