Influence of Supplementary Vitamin D on the Prognostic Pathway of Type1 Diabetes Among Children

Author:

Ragab Mostafa Hassan1,Sherif Eman Monir2,Gawad Nadia Badawy Abd- El3,Elserougy Safaa Mohamed3,Shaban Eman Essam4,Mostafa Elham Mohamed4

Affiliation:

1. 1Environmental and Occupational medicine, department of medical science, Institute of Environmental Studies and Research, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

2. 2Department of Pediatrics, Pediatric and adolescence diabetes unit, Ain Shams University Egypt

3. 3Environmental and Occupational medicine, National Research Centre, Cairo, Egypt

4. 4Department of Environmental and Occupational medicine, National Research Centre Egypt

Abstract

Diabetes is one of the commonest chronic diseases worldwide. Vitamin D deficiency showed to be increasing, and have a potential role in autoimmune diseases among which in type 1 diabetes. The aim The aim of the study was to assess the impact of oral vitamin D supplementation on blood glucose (HbA1C) in T1DM patients and to find out the role of vitamin D as a biomarker for follow of T1DM patients compared to HbA1C. Subjects and methods: A randomized interventional clinical study was designed. The study enrolled 60 children patients with T1DM. Only 45 children continued to the end of study. Initial (pre-intake) assessment included history taking, clinical examination, and measurement of serum 25-OH vitamin D3 and serum HbA1C. These children received oral vitamin D supplements for 3 months then post-intake assessment were done again. Results: The study showed that serum vitamin D was deficient among Egyptian children and adolescents with T1DM (mean 11.4±3.4 ng/ml). , 53.33% of the patients had vitamin D deficiency with a 35.6% had insufficiency and 11.11% were VD sufficient. Patients received oral vitamin D supplementation for 3 months after which marked improvement in the levels of serum vitamin D levels and HA1C, 87.5% and 86.5% respectively.

Publisher

Oriental Scientific Publishing Company

Subject

Pharmacology

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