Vitamin D Deficiency in the Middle East and its Health Consequences for Children and Adults

Despite its abundant sunshine the Middle East, a region spanning latitudes from 12°N to 42°N allowing vitamin D synthesis year round, registers some of the lowest levels of vitamin D and the highest rates of hypovitaminosis D worldwide. This major public health problem affects individuals across all life stages including pregnant women, neonates, infants, children and adolescents, adults, and the elderly. Furthermore, while rickets is almost eradicated from developed countries, it is still reported in several countries in the Middle East. These observations can be explained by limited sun exposure due to cultural practices, dark skin color, and very hot climate in several countries in the gulf area, along with prolonged breast feeding without vitamin D supplementation, decreased calcium content of diets and outdoor activity, obesity, and lack of government regulation for vitamin D fortification of food, in several if not in all countries. The lack of population based studies renders estimates for the prevalence and incidence of rickets in the Middle East difficult, but several series from the region illustrate its dire consequences on growth and development. Furthermore, it is reported that 20–80% of apparently healthy individuals from several countries in this region have suboptimal vitamin D levels, depending on the cut-off used for defining hypovitaminosis D, the country, season, age group, and gender studied. Suboptimal levels have been associated with compromised skeletal health across age groups, and with poor muscular function and increased fall risk and osteoporotic fractures in the elderly. Studies detailing associations between low vitamin D levels and musculoskeletal health in the Middle East, and the impact of various treatment regimens are reviewed. Current recommendations for vitamin D derived from data in western subjects may not be sufficient for subjects from the Middle East, therefore suggestions for vitamin D replacement doses based on evidence available to-date are provided. Hypovitaminosis D is a major public health problem across all life stages in the Middle East with deleterious immediate and latent manifestations. Long term strategies to address this often silent disease should include public education, national health policies for screening and prevention through food fortification, and treatment through vitamin D supplementation.

[1]  E. Gunter,et al.  Hypovitaminosis D in medical inpatients. , 1998, The New England journal of medicine.

[2]  F. Azizi,et al.  Changes in calcium, 25(OH) vitamin D3 and other biochemical factors during pregnancy , 2006, Journal of endocrinological investigation.

[3]  M. Holick,et al.  Vitamin D: importance in the prevention of cancers, type 1 diabetes, heart disease, and osteoporosis. , 2004, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[4]  Aisha M Siddiqui,et al.  Prevalence of vitamin D deficiency rickets in adolescent school girls in Western region, Saudi Arabia. , 2007, Saudi medical journal.

[5]  Afrozul Haq,et al.  Nutritional rickets and z scores for height in the United Arab Emirates: To D or not to D? , 2008, Pediatrics international : official journal of the Japan Pediatric Society.

[6]  P. Lips,et al.  High prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in pregnant non-Western women in The Hague, Netherlands. , 2006, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[7]  M. Hassanein,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency rickets in maternity and Children's Hospital, Makkah, Saudi Arabia. , 1997, Annals of Saudi medicine.

[8]  B. Ozkan,et al.  Prevalence of vitamin D deficiency rickets in the eastern part of Turkey , 2008, European Journal of Pediatrics.

[9]  Demet Toprak,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency in early infancy. , 2005, The Journal of nutrition.

[10]  A. Molla,et al.  Risk factors for nutritional rickets among children in Kuwait , 2000, Pediatrics international : official journal of the Japan Pediatric Society.

[11]  S. Alavian,et al.  Vitamin D insufficiency among children and adolescents living in Tehran, Iran. , 2009, Journal of tropical pediatrics.

[12]  J. Pettifor,et al.  Nutritional rickets around the world: causes and future directions , 2006, Annals of tropical paediatrics.

[13]  H. Meyer,et al.  Prevalence and predictors of vitamin D deficiency in five immigrant groups living in Oslo, Norway: the Oslo Immigrant Health Study , 2005, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[14]  G. Fuleihan,et al.  Hypovitaminosis D in Healthy Schoolchildren , 2001, Pediatrics.

[15]  M. Abdullah,et al.  Adolescent Rickets in Saudi Arabia: A Rich and Sunny Country , 2002, Journal of pediatric endocrinology & metabolism : JPEM.

[16]  A. Uysal,et al.  The prevalence of Vitamin D deficiency and effects of ultraviolet light on Vitamin D levels in elderly Turkish population. , 2005, Archives of gerontology and geriatrics.

[17]  F. Azizi,et al.  Seasonal variation of serum 25 hydroxy D3 in residents of Tehran , 2004, Journal of endocrinological investigation.

[18]  J. Chandler,et al.  The prevalence of vitamin D inadequacy amongst women with osteoporosis: an international epidemiological investigation , 2006, Journal of internal medicine.

[19]  M. Lubani,et al.  Vitamin-D-deficiency rickets in Kuwait: the prevalence of a preventable disease. , 1989, Annals of tropical paediatrics.

[20]  Nestlé Nutrition S.A Nestlé Nutrition workshop series , 1983 .

[21]  B. Dawson-Hughes,et al.  Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D status of adolescents and adults in two seasonal subpopulations from NHANES III. , 2002, Bone.

[22]  A. Lapillonne,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency in Iranian mothers and their neonates: a pilot study , 2001, Acta paediatrica.

[23]  S. Shany,et al.  Vitamin D-deficiency in the elderly: treatment with ergocalciferol and hydroxylated analogues of vitamin D3. , 1988, Israel journal of medical sciences.

[24]  H. Salman,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency rickets in Riyadh. , 1991, Annals of Saudi Medicine.

[25]  A. A. Mishal,et al.  Effects of Different Dress Styles on Vitamin D Levels in Healthy Young Jordanian Women , 2001, Osteoporosis International.

[26]  G. Fuleihan,et al.  Vitamin D insufficiency and musculoskeletal health in children and adolescents , 2007 .

[27]  M. Agarwal,et al.  Hypovitaminosis D and vitamin D deficiency in exclusively breast-feeding infants and their mothers in summer: a justification for vitamin D supplementation of breast-feeding infants. , 2003, The Journal of pediatrics.

[28]  G. Fuleihan,et al.  There is no lower threshold level for parathyroid hormone as 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations increase , 2005, Journal of endocrinological investigation.

[29]  A. Bener,et al.  Vitamin D Defficiency in Rheumatology Clinic Practice in Qatar , 2006 .

[30]  A. Kaya,et al.  Association of subclinical vitamin D deficiency in newborns with acute lower respiratory infection and their mothers , 2009, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[31]  M. Preece,et al.  Vitamin-D deficiency among Asian immigrants to Britain. , 1973, Lancet.

[32]  P. Lips Vitamin D status and nutrition in Europe and Asia , 2007, The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.

[33]  N. Nagelkerke,et al.  Predictors and relationships of serum 25 hydroxyvitamin D concentration with bone turnover markers, bone mineral density, and vitamin D receptor genotype in Emirati women. , 2006, Bone.

[34]  A. Rassouli,et al.  Determination of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D(3) levels in early postmenopausal Iranian women: relationship with bone mineral density. , 2001, Bone.

[35]  G. E. El-Hajj Fuleihan,et al.  Hypovitaminosis D osteopathy: is it mediated through PTH, lean mass, or is it a direct effect? , 2006, Bone.

[36]  N. Fida Assessment of nutritional rickets in Western Saudi Arabia. , 2003, Saudi medical journal.

[37]  Stephen H. D. Jackson INT CONGR SER , 2001 .

[38]  L. Thalib,et al.  Vitamin D status of mothers and their neonates in Kuwait , 2005, Pediatrics international : official journal of the Japan Pediatric Society.

[39]  H. Narchi,et al.  Dilated cardiomyopathy secondary to nutritional rickets , 2008, Annals of tropical paediatrics.

[40]  T. Oppé,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency. , 1979, British medical journal.

[41]  A. Bener,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency in healthy children in a sunny country: associated factors , 2009, International journal of food sciences and nutrition.

[42]  B. Dawson-Hughes Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D and functional outcomes in the elderly. , 2008, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[43]  C. Kovacs,et al.  Calcium and bone disorders during pregnancy and lactation. , 2006, Endocrinology and metabolism clinics of North America.

[44]  A. Soliman,et al.  Linear growth in relation to the circulating concentrations of insulin-like growth factor I, parathyroid hormone, and 25-hydroxy vitamin D in children with nutritional rickets before and after treatment: endocrine adaptation to vitamin D deficiency. , 2008, Metabolism: clinical and experimental.

[45]  B. Larijani,et al.  Relationship between pregnancy outcomes and maternal vitamin D and calcium intake: A cross-sectional study , 2006, Gynecological endocrinology : the official journal of the International Society of Gynecological Endocrinology.

[46]  U. Liberman Vitamin D–Resistant Diseases , 2007, Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.

[47]  B. Larijani,et al.  The status of biochemical parameters in varying degrees of vitamin D deficiency , 2005, Journal of Bone and Mineral Metabolism.

[48]  Z. Şıklar,et al.  Hypocalcemic seizure due to congenital rickets in the first day of life. , 2007, The Turkish journal of pediatrics.

[49]  A. al-Mazyad,et al.  Nutritional rickets and osteomalacia in school children and adolescents. , 2002, Saudi medical journal.

[50]  M. Hammami,et al.  Bone Mineral Density of the Spine and Femur in Healthy Saudi Females: Relation to Vitamin D Status, Pregnancy, and Lactation , 1999, Calcified Tissue International.

[51]  M. Burch,et al.  Hypocalcaemia and vitamin D deficiency: an important, but preventable, cause of life-threatening infant heart failure , 2007, Heart.

[52]  S. Yarman,et al.  Sunlight exposure and vitamin D deficiency in Turkish women , 2000, Journal of endocrinological investigation.

[53]  C. Cowell,et al.  The re-emerging burden of rickets: a decade of experience from Sydney , 2005, Archives of Disease in Childhood.

[54]  S. Sedrani,et al.  Sunlight and vitamin D status in normal Saudi subjects. , 1983, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[55]  P. Whittaker,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency rickets in breast‐fed infants presenting with hypocalcaemic seizures , 1995, Acta paediatrica.

[56]  S. Bahijri Serum 25-hydroxy cholecalciferol in infants and preschool children in the Western region of Saudi Arabia. Etiological factors. , 2001, Saudi medical journal.

[57]  J. Pettifor Nutritional rickets: deficiency of vitamin D, calcium, or both? , 2004, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[58]  Z. Mahfoud,et al.  Short- and long-term safety of weekly high-dose vitamin D3 supplementation in school children. , 2008, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[59]  N. Abdul-Ghaffar,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency in veiled Kuwaiti women. , 1996, European journal of clinical nutrition.

[60]  M. Visser,et al.  Adiposity in relation to vitamin D status and parathyroid hormone levels: a population-based study in older men and women. , 2005, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[61]  Z. Hochberg,et al.  Rickets in the Middle East: role of environment and genetic predisposition. , 2008, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[62]  G. Fuleihan,et al.  Low calcium and vitamin D intake in healthy children and adolescents and their correlates , 2005, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

[63]  M. Amini,et al.  Prevalence of Vitamin D Deficiency in Isfahani High School Students in 2004 , 2005, Hormone Research in Paediatrics.

[64]  B. Favrat,et al.  Musculoskeletal pain in female asylum seekers and hypovitaminosis D3 , 2004, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[65]  R. Vieth,et al.  Effect of vitamin D replacement on musculoskeletal parameters in school children: a randomized controlled trial. , 2006, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[66]  C. Wagner,et al.  Prevention of Rickets and Vitamin D Deficiency in Infants, Children, and Adolescents , 2008, Pediatrics.

[67]  A. S. El-Radhi,et al.  High incidence of rickets in children with wheezy bronchitis in a developing country. , 1982, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.

[68]  B. Margetts,et al.  High levels of childhood rickets in rural North Yemen. , 1987, Social science & medicine.

[69]  A. Najada,et al.  The frequency of nutritional rickets among hospitalized infants and its relation to respiratory diseases. , 2004, Journal of tropical pediatrics.

[70]  Y. Weisman,et al.  Vitamin D Deficiency in Elderly Patients in a General Hospital , 1989, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[71]  A. Yılmaz,et al.  Bone mineral density in response to two different regimes in rickets. , 2006, Indian pediatrics.

[72]  P. Badrinath,et al.  Higher prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in mothers of rachitic than nonrachitic children. , 2005, The Journal of pediatrics.

[73]  Richard Eastell,et al.  Algorithm‐Based Qualitative and Semiquantitative Identification of Prevalent Vertebral Fracture: Agreement Between Different Readers, Imaging Modalities, and Diagnostic Approaches , 2007, Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.

[74]  S. Ish-shalom,et al.  Comparison of daily, weekly, and monthly vitamin D3 in ethanol dosing protocols for two months in elderly hip fracture patients. , 2008, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[75]  L. G. Ramavat Vitamin D deficiency rickets at birth in Kuwait , 1999, Indian journal of pediatrics.

[76]  S. Shany,et al.  25 Hydroxycholecalciferol levels in Beduin women in labor and in cord blood of their infants. , 1979, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[77]  H. Dahifar,et al.  Impact of dietary and lifestyle on vitamin D in healthy student girls aged 11-15 years. , 2006, The journal of medical investigation : JMI.

[78]  T. Meissner,et al.  Interventions for the prevention of nutritional rickets in term born children. , 2007, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[79]  R. Salimpour Rickets in Tehran. Study of 200 cases. , 1975, Archives of disease in childhood.

[80]  Intakes for Calcium , Phosphorus , Magnesium , Vitamin D , and Fluoride , 1974 .

[81]  P. Beaumont,et al.  The Middle East: A geographical study , 1976 .

[82]  Mustafa Kosecik,et al.  Dilated cardiomyopathy due to nutritional vitamin D deficiency rickets , 2007, Pediatrics international : official journal of the Japan Pediatric Society.

[83]  G. Fuleihan,et al.  Vitamin D: a growing perspective. , 2008, Critical reviews in clinical laboratory sciences.

[84]  P. Reinert,et al.  Le rachitisme symptomatique de l’adolescent , 2004 .

[85]  Y. Weisman Vitamin D deficiency rickets and osteomalacia in Israel. , 2003, The Israel Medical Association journal : IMAJ.

[86]  P. Dandona,et al.  Vitamin D nutrition in pregnant women at term and in newly born babies in Saudi Arabia. , 1984, Journal of clinical pathology.

[87]  S. Taha,et al.  25-Hydroxyvitamin D and Total Calcium: Extraordinarily Low Plasma Concentrations in Saudi Mothers and Their Neonates , 1984, Pediatric Research.

[88]  L. Bouter,et al.  Fatty fish and supplements are the greatest modifiable contributors to the serum 25‐hydroxyvitamin D concentration in a multiethnic population , 2008, Clinical endocrinology.

[89]  M. Basak,et al.  Comparisons of oral calcium, high dose vitamin D and a combination of these in the treatment of nutritional rickets in children. , 2002, Journal of tropical pediatrics.

[90]  G. Fuleihan,et al.  Hypovitaminosis D in a sunny country. , 1999, The New England journal of medicine.

[91]  H. Narchi,et al.  Symptomatic rickets in adolescence , 2001, Archives of disease in childhood.

[92]  A. Al-Ali,et al.  Vitamin D deficiency and rickets in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia , 2007, Annals of tropical paediatrics.

[93]  T. Cole,et al.  Etiology of rickets in Egyptian children. , 1987, Human nutrition. Clinical nutrition.

[94]  N. Nagelkerke,et al.  Efficacy of daily and monthly high-dose calciferol in vitamin D-deficient nulliparous and lactating women. , 2007, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[95]  H. Çaksen,et al.  Comparison of Low and High Dose of Vitamin D Treatment in Nutritional Vitamin D Deficiency Rickets , 2003, Journal of pediatric endocrinology & metabolism : JPEM.

[96]  C. Koppes Captain Mahan, General Gordon, and the origins of the term ‘Middle East’ , 1976 .

[97]  M H Gannagé-Yared,et al.  Hypovitaminosis D in a Sunny Country: Relation to Lifestyle and Bone Markers , 2000, Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.

[98]  F. Azizi,et al.  Association between vitamin D and bone mineral density in Iranian postmenopausal women , 2008, Journal of Bone and Mineral Metabolism.

[99]  A. Elidrissy Vitamin D-deficiency rickets in Saudi Arabia , 1991 .

[100]  P. Mathew,et al.  Convulsion as a possible manifestation of vitamin D deficiency rickets in infants one to six months of age. , 1992, Annals of Saudi medicine.

[101]  Looker Ac,et al.  Hypovitaminosis D in medical inpatients. , 1998 .