复发性良性阵发性体位性眩晕患者维生素D不足/缺乏

R. Pecci, M. Mandalà, Antonella Marcari, R. Bertolai, P. Vannucchi, R. Santimone, Lisa Bentivegna, F. Di Giustino, A. Mengucci, S. Vanni, Federica Pollastri, B. Giannoni
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:本研究的目的是验证(1)维生素缺乏症D与良性阵发性位置性眩晕之间是否存在联系,(2)补充维生素D后良性阵发性位置性眩晕复发的次数减少;(3)纠正维生素D不足后,良性阵发性体位性眩晕对物理治疗的反应有所改善。方法:选取26例良性阵发性体位性眩晕患者和24例从未发生过眩晕的患者作为对照组。所有良性阵发性体位性眩晕患者均接受每周一次的物理治疗,直至良性阵发性体位性眩晕消退。所有参与者都接受了一定剂量的血清25(OH)维生素D。对于维生素缺乏症D患者,我们开了胆骨化醇。治疗3个月后,所有患者被要求接受第二次剂量的血清25(OH)维生素D。对于每个患者,我们计算了在补充维生素D之前和之后解决每次良性阵发性体位性眩晕发作所需的动作次数。结果:在T0时,患者和对照组的平均血清维生素D水平均不足(23.18和23.73 ng/ml),组间差异无统计学意义(p 0.16)。然而,补充前血清维生素D缺乏的患者比例高于对照组(65.39%和33.3%)。后者的发现具有统计学意义,P = 0.002。在整合前,100%的患者复发BPPV(平均复发次数/pt: 9.31),而在补充后,只有5/16(31.25%)的患者复发1次(平均复发次数/pt: 0.31, P = 0.0003)。补充前后的平均动作次数分别为1.37次和1.0次(P = 0.6543)。结论:我们的研究结果表明:(1)维生素D缺乏与BPPV的发病有关;(2)维生素缺乏症的纠正能够减少复发患者的数量和每例患者的复发次数;(3)我们没有发现补充维生素D对良性发作性体位性眩晕对物理治疗的反应性有显著影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Vitamin D Insufficiency/Deficiency in Patients with Recurrent Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo
Abstract Background: The aim of this study is to verify if (1) there is a link between hypovitaminosis D and benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, (2) the number of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo relapses decreases after vitamin D supplementation; and (3) benign paroxysmal positional vertigo response to physical therapy improves after hypovitaminosis D correction. Methods: We enrolled 26 patients with benign paroxysmal positional vertigo and 24 subjects, who never suffered from vertigo, as a control group. All benign paroxysmal positional vertigo patients underwent physical therapy, once a week, until benign paroxysmal positional vertigo resolution. All participants were subjected to a dosage of serum 25(OH) vitamin D. In patients with hypovitaminosis D, we prescribed cholecalciferol. After 3 months of therapy, all patients were asked to undergo a second dosage of serum 25(OH) vitamin D. For each patient, we counted the number of maneuvers required to resolve each episode of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo before and after vitamin D supplementation. Results: At T0, both patients and controls had insufficient average vitamin D serum levels (23.18 and 23.73 ng/ml) without significant differences between groups (p 0.16). However, the percentage of patients who had a serum vitamin D deficiency before supplementation was higher than that of the control group (65.39% and 33.3%). The latter finding was statistically significant with a P = 0.002. Before integration 100% of patients had a recurrent BPPV (average number of recurrences/pt: 9.31) while after supplementation only 5/16 pts (31.25%) had just 1 recurrence (average number of relapses/pt 0.31, P = 0.0003). The average number of maneuvers before and after supplementation was 1.37 and 1.0 respectively (P = 0.6543). Conclusion: Our results suggest that (1) there is a relationship between vitamin D deficiency and the onset of BPPV, (2) hypovitaminosis correction is able to reduce both the number of patients relapsing and the number of relapses per patient, and (3) we have not found a significant effect of vitamin D supplementation as regards the responsivity of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo to physical therapy.
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