Effect of Vitamin D deficiency in lower extremity and pulmonary venous thromboembolism

Authors

  • Khatereh Dehghani Department of Cardiology, Jahrom University of Medical Science, Jahrom, Iran
  • Aygin Nowrouzi Medical Student of Research Committee, Jahrom University of Medical Science, Jahrom, Iran
  • Amir Hossein Pourdavood Department of Surgery, Kerman University of Medical Science, Kerman, Iran
  • Zhila Rahmanian Department of Internal Medicine, Jahrom University of Medical Science, Jahrom, Iran

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15419/bmrat.v6i4.535

Keywords:

Deficiency, PTE, vitamin D, VTE

Abstract

Introduction: Vitamin D deficiency increases inflammation and dysfunction of pancreas betacells, resulting in atherosclerotic disorders, cerebrovascular disorder, and CVDs.

Methods: In the present cross-sectional study, vitamin D was evaluated in the plasma of 42 patients with lower extremity DVT or PE, as well as 42 healthy controls. Using the chemiluminescence assay, the plasma vitamin D levels were determined. After collection, the blood samples were examined within 60 minutes. Vitamin D levels were classified as sufficient, insufficient, and deficient (> 30 ng/mL, 20- 29 ng/mL, and < 20 ng/mL, respectively).

Results: The prevalence of deficiency in vitamin D was higher in the cases than the controls. The two groups were significantly different regarding vitamin D levels (p = 0.024). Based on the vitamin D classification, deficiency was reported in 30 (71.4%) patients and 18 (42.9%) controls.

Conclusion: Our findings indicated that VTE patients had lower concentration of vitamin D, and the correlation between VTE and vitamin D deficiency was confirmed.

 

Published

2019-04-29

Issue

Section

Original Research

How to Cite

Effect of Vitamin D deficiency in lower extremity and pulmonary venous thromboembolism. (2019). Biomedical Research and Therapy, 6(4), 3107-3112. https://doi.org/10.15419/bmrat.v6i4.535

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