Association between vitamin D deficiency and prevalence of metabolic syndrome in female population: a systematic review

Author:

Maroufi Nazila Fathi123,Pezeshgi Pourya4,Mortezania Zohreh5,Pourmohammad Pirouz6,Eftekhari Reyhaneh7,Moradzadeh Mahmood4,Vahedian Vahid89,Nouri Mohammad2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Student Research Committee , Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Tabriz , Islamic Republic of Iran

2. Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Institute, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Tabriz , Islamic Republic of Iran

3. Department of Biochemistry and Clinical Laboratories , Faculty of Medicine, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences , Tabriz , Islamic Republic of Iran

4. Department of Medical Laboratory Science , Student Research Committee, Maragheh Faculty of Medical Sciences , Maragheh , Islamic Republic of Iran

5. Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences , Tehran , Islamic Republic of Iran

6. Department of Clinical Biochemistry , School of Medicine, Ardabil University of Medical Science , Ardabil , Islamic Republic of Iran

7. Department of Genetic , Faculty Biotechnology, Semnan University , Semnan , Islamic Republic of Iran

8. Department of Experimental Biomedicine , Dr.Vahid Vahedian Medical Diagnostic Laboratory Gorgan , Tehran , Islamic Republic of Iran

9. Department of Medical Laboratory Sciences , Faculty of Medicine, Islamic Azad University (IAU) , Sari , Islamic Republic of Iran

Abstract

Abstract Background The increasing prevalence of metabolic syndrome (MS) especially in female population, has become a major problem in health care systems. In this regards, it is necessary to identify the risk factors. Vitamin D deficiency is now proposed as one of the possible risk factors for metabolic syndrome, we investigated the relationship between vitamin D status and MS in female. Methods We searched observational studies with keywords Vitamin D, metabolic syndrome, metabolic syndrome X, insulin-resistance syndrome, metabolic cardiovascular syndrome and Reaven Syndrome X and female in pubmed, scopus, science direct, cochrane, web of science, google scholar and SID databases, regardless of publication time. Two hundred ninety five studies were found, and finally only 12 articles were selected according to exclusion and inclusion criteria. Results In nine studies that reported the prevalence of MS, the prevalence of MS among women with vitamin D deficiency was higher than female with normal vitamin D (34.5 vs. 30.2%). The prevalence of abdominal obesity, high blood pressure, high TG and HDL deficiency is higher in women with vitamin D deficiency. Also, the mean waist circumference, blood pressure, fast blood sugar (FBS), TG and BMI were higher. The most incident factor was high blood pressure (61.4 vs. 56.5%) and the lowest prevalence is associated with high FBS (32.2 vs. 33.5% in the other group). Conclusion The prevalence of MS is significantly associated with vitamin D deficiency, and among related factors, HDL, TG and blood pressure are statistically associated with vitamin D status.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Endocrinology,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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