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ALBUQUERQUE — A prospective pilot study of 41 children with complaints of nonspecific musculoskeletal pain found their average levels of vitamin D were low even though the youngsters lived in the sunny southwest of the United States.
The mean level of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D was lower in a group of 35 children with vague pain complaints than in 6 children found to have diagnosable conditions that explained their pain: 28 ng/mL vs. 38 ng/mL. While this difference was statistically significant, average vitamin D levels in both groups of children (aged 2-17 years) met the study's definition of hypovitaminosis D.
Moreover, when eight children were given vitamin D supplements, five had “marked subjective improvement or complete relief” from pain. Those making a recovery included one of two children with documented hip effusion as well as children with back pains and leg pains that had lasted, in some cases, for years.
“I am certainly not saying growing pains are caused by vitamin D deficiency, but it is something we are exploring,” Dr. Elizabeth A. Szalay said in an interview after presenting the data at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America.
What was, perhaps, most remarkable, was that the children lived in New Mexico—an area not typically used in vitamin D studies because it has abundant sunshine year round. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III suggests that 3% of healthy adolescents at a higher latitude have vitamin D levels below 25 ng/mL during summer, she said. In the New Mexico study, 30% of the youngsters in pain had vitamin D levels below 25 ng/mL.
Dr. Szalay, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of New Mexico and Carrie Tingley Hospital, both in Albuquerque, and her coinvestigator Elyce B. Tryon used a local laboratory's classification of vitamin D levels in their analysis. Ranges were presented as 0-5 ng/mL for deficiency, 5-20 ng/mL for insufficiency, 20-40 ng/mL for hypovitaminosis D, 40-100 ng/mL for sufficiency, and more than 100 ng/mL for toxicity.
The highest level recorded was 47 ng/mL. It was seen in both subgroups: those with vague complaints and those with objective explanations of their pain (Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease, arthrogryposis, and chondrolysis). The lowest level in the majority with vague complaints was less than half that of the children with diagnoses: 12 ng/mL vs. 25 ng/mL.
Dr. Szalay speculated that the low levels of vitamin D could be attributed to a convergence of factors. Sunlight is a prime source of vitamin D and 15 minutes of exposure a day is sufficient, she said, but many children do not play outside. They don't walk to school and may spend as much as 44 hours a week on electronic media such as video games.
Diet by itself is unlikely to provide enough vitamin D, she continued. Milk is fortified with vitamin D, but consumption is down, compared with years past. “In 1970, children drank twice as much milk as soda,” she said. “In 2000, children drank twice as much soda as milk.”
While children benefit from the calcium in other dairy products, she added, these do not contain vitamin D and are usually not fortified. “Eggs have vitamin D, if they feed it to the chickens and, even then, it is a very small amount,” she said. “There are only 25 units in an egg. You've got to eat a lot of eggs to get to 800 to a thousand units.”
Children's multivitamins, likewise, do not make up for vitamin D deficiency, according to Dr. Szalay. Some only contain 64 U a day, she said, recommending that children at risk take both a multivitamin and a chewy calcium-plus-D supplement plus two glasses of milk a day. For children without pain, she set the desired daily intake at 800-1,000 U of vitamin D, but added that she recommends 1,000-2,000 U for children with pain.
The investigators have started another study in children without pain complaints, she added. One facet will be to compare those engaged in outdoor sports such as soccer, football, and baseball with those who engage in indoor activities.
ALBUQUERQUE — A prospective pilot study of 41 children with complaints of nonspecific musculoskeletal pain found their average levels of vitamin D were low even though the youngsters lived in the sunny southwest of the United States.
The mean level of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D was lower in a group of 35 children with vague pain complaints than in 6 children found to have diagnosable conditions that explained their pain: 28 ng/mL vs. 38 ng/mL. While this difference was statistically significant, average vitamin D levels in both groups of children (aged 2-17 years) met the study's definition of hypovitaminosis D.
Moreover, when eight children were given vitamin D supplements, five had “marked subjective improvement or complete relief” from pain. Those making a recovery included one of two children with documented hip effusion as well as children with back pains and leg pains that had lasted, in some cases, for years.
“I am certainly not saying growing pains are caused by vitamin D deficiency, but it is something we are exploring,” Dr. Elizabeth A. Szalay said in an interview after presenting the data at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America.
What was, perhaps, most remarkable, was that the children lived in New Mexico—an area not typically used in vitamin D studies because it has abundant sunshine year round. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III suggests that 3% of healthy adolescents at a higher latitude have vitamin D levels below 25 ng/mL during summer, she said. In the New Mexico study, 30% of the youngsters in pain had vitamin D levels below 25 ng/mL.
Dr. Szalay, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of New Mexico and Carrie Tingley Hospital, both in Albuquerque, and her coinvestigator Elyce B. Tryon used a local laboratory's classification of vitamin D levels in their analysis. Ranges were presented as 0-5 ng/mL for deficiency, 5-20 ng/mL for insufficiency, 20-40 ng/mL for hypovitaminosis D, 40-100 ng/mL for sufficiency, and more than 100 ng/mL for toxicity.
The highest level recorded was 47 ng/mL. It was seen in both subgroups: those with vague complaints and those with objective explanations of their pain (Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease, arthrogryposis, and chondrolysis). The lowest level in the majority with vague complaints was less than half that of the children with diagnoses: 12 ng/mL vs. 25 ng/mL.
Dr. Szalay speculated that the low levels of vitamin D could be attributed to a convergence of factors. Sunlight is a prime source of vitamin D and 15 minutes of exposure a day is sufficient, she said, but many children do not play outside. They don't walk to school and may spend as much as 44 hours a week on electronic media such as video games.
Diet by itself is unlikely to provide enough vitamin D, she continued. Milk is fortified with vitamin D, but consumption is down, compared with years past. “In 1970, children drank twice as much milk as soda,” she said. “In 2000, children drank twice as much soda as milk.”
While children benefit from the calcium in other dairy products, she added, these do not contain vitamin D and are usually not fortified. “Eggs have vitamin D, if they feed it to the chickens and, even then, it is a very small amount,” she said. “There are only 25 units in an egg. You've got to eat a lot of eggs to get to 800 to a thousand units.”
Children's multivitamins, likewise, do not make up for vitamin D deficiency, according to Dr. Szalay. Some only contain 64 U a day, she said, recommending that children at risk take both a multivitamin and a chewy calcium-plus-D supplement plus two glasses of milk a day. For children without pain, she set the desired daily intake at 800-1,000 U of vitamin D, but added that she recommends 1,000-2,000 U for children with pain.
The investigators have started another study in children without pain complaints, she added. One facet will be to compare those engaged in outdoor sports such as soccer, football, and baseball with those who engage in indoor activities.
ALBUQUERQUE — A prospective pilot study of 41 children with complaints of nonspecific musculoskeletal pain found their average levels of vitamin D were low even though the youngsters lived in the sunny southwest of the United States.
The mean level of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D was lower in a group of 35 children with vague pain complaints than in 6 children found to have diagnosable conditions that explained their pain: 28 ng/mL vs. 38 ng/mL. While this difference was statistically significant, average vitamin D levels in both groups of children (aged 2-17 years) met the study's definition of hypovitaminosis D.
Moreover, when eight children were given vitamin D supplements, five had “marked subjective improvement or complete relief” from pain. Those making a recovery included one of two children with documented hip effusion as well as children with back pains and leg pains that had lasted, in some cases, for years.
“I am certainly not saying growing pains are caused by vitamin D deficiency, but it is something we are exploring,” Dr. Elizabeth A. Szalay said in an interview after presenting the data at the annual meeting of the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America.
What was, perhaps, most remarkable, was that the children lived in New Mexico—an area not typically used in vitamin D studies because it has abundant sunshine year round. The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III suggests that 3% of healthy adolescents at a higher latitude have vitamin D levels below 25 ng/mL during summer, she said. In the New Mexico study, 30% of the youngsters in pain had vitamin D levels below 25 ng/mL.
Dr. Szalay, an orthopedic surgeon at the University of New Mexico and Carrie Tingley Hospital, both in Albuquerque, and her coinvestigator Elyce B. Tryon used a local laboratory's classification of vitamin D levels in their analysis. Ranges were presented as 0-5 ng/mL for deficiency, 5-20 ng/mL for insufficiency, 20-40 ng/mL for hypovitaminosis D, 40-100 ng/mL for sufficiency, and more than 100 ng/mL for toxicity.
The highest level recorded was 47 ng/mL. It was seen in both subgroups: those with vague complaints and those with objective explanations of their pain (Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease, arthrogryposis, and chondrolysis). The lowest level in the majority with vague complaints was less than half that of the children with diagnoses: 12 ng/mL vs. 25 ng/mL.
Dr. Szalay speculated that the low levels of vitamin D could be attributed to a convergence of factors. Sunlight is a prime source of vitamin D and 15 minutes of exposure a day is sufficient, she said, but many children do not play outside. They don't walk to school and may spend as much as 44 hours a week on electronic media such as video games.
Diet by itself is unlikely to provide enough vitamin D, she continued. Milk is fortified with vitamin D, but consumption is down, compared with years past. “In 1970, children drank twice as much milk as soda,” she said. “In 2000, children drank twice as much soda as milk.”
While children benefit from the calcium in other dairy products, she added, these do not contain vitamin D and are usually not fortified. “Eggs have vitamin D, if they feed it to the chickens and, even then, it is a very small amount,” she said. “There are only 25 units in an egg. You've got to eat a lot of eggs to get to 800 to a thousand units.”
Children's multivitamins, likewise, do not make up for vitamin D deficiency, according to Dr. Szalay. Some only contain 64 U a day, she said, recommending that children at risk take both a multivitamin and a chewy calcium-plus-D supplement plus two glasses of milk a day. For children without pain, she set the desired daily intake at 800-1,000 U of vitamin D, but added that she recommends 1,000-2,000 U for children with pain.
The investigators have started another study in children without pain complaints, she added. One facet will be to compare those engaged in outdoor sports such as soccer, football, and baseball with those who engage in indoor activities.