Epidemiology of vitamin D deficiency in children presenting to a paediatric orthopaedic service in the UK

2012 
Background Vitamin D deficiency may increase predisposition to a number of paediatric orthopaedic conditions and the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency is increasing in children in developed countries. The aim of this study was to determine the epidemiology of vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency in children presenting to a regional paediatric orthopaedic service. We also examined the relationships between vitamin D status, social deprivation and ethnicity Methods Individuals, age Results 187 children (97 male, 90 female, mean age 7.1 years) underwent serum 25-(OH) D level measurement. 82% were white British and 11% of Asian ethnicity. The calculation of the total depravation index for the whole cohort showed 34 (18%) of subjects were in quartile 1 (least deprived), 54 (29%) in quartile 2, 49 (26%) in quartile 3 and 50 (27%) in quartile 4 (Most deprived). 60 (32%) had vitamin D insufficiency with 25-(OH) levels Conclusions There is a need for awareness of the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in the paediatric orthopaedic population presenting with bone pain and lower limb deformity before commencing ‘observation or orthopaedic surgical treatment’
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