Visit Indian Travel Sites
Goa,
Kerala,
Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh,
Delhi,
Rajasthan,
Uttar Pradesh,
Himachal Pradesh,
Assam,
Sikkim,
Madhya Pradesh,
Jammu & Kashmir
Karnataka
|
Low vitamin D levels associated with higher rates of asthma among kids | African American children with asthma in metropolitan
Washington, DC, are significantly more likely to have low levels of vitamin D than healthy African American children, researchers have claimed. The study by
researchers at Children's National Medical Center has been published in The Journal
of Pediatrics. Vitamin D deficiency has been recently linked to a variety of non-bone
related diseases including depression, autoimmune disorders, and now asthma. "It's
been well-documented that as a group, African Americans are more likely than other
racial groups to have low levels of vitamin D," said Robert Freishtat, MD, MPH,
an emergency medicine physician and lead author on the study. "But we were shocked
to see that almost all of the African American children with asthma that we tested
had low vitamin D levels. After adjusting for differences in age, weight, and
the time of year of the testing, the odds of these kids with asthma being vitamin
D deficient were nearly twenty times those of healthy kids." The study took a
one-time measurement of vitamin D in the blood of 85 African American children
with asthma, who were between 6 and 20 years old. Additionally, the researchers
measured the vitamin D levels of 21 healthy African American children between
the ages of 6 and 9 years of age. The research team found that 86 percent of the
children in the study with asthma had insufficient levels of vitamin D, while
only 19 percent of non-asthmatics had these low levels.
|
|
|
|
|
|