1. Vitamin D status in Chinese pregnant women and their newborns in Beijing and their relationships to birth size.
- Author
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Song, Shu Jun, Si, Shaoyan, Liu, Junli, Chen, Xingming, Zhou, Ling, Jia, Guiyue, Liu, Genlan, Niu, Yujing, Wu, Jie, Zhang, Wenying, and Zhang, Jianzhong
- Subjects
VITAMIN D deficiency ,NUTRITION in pregnancy ,NEWBORN infant nutrition ,BIRTH size ,LOW birth weight ,CORD blood - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in pregnant women and their newborns in Beijing, China and the influence of vitamin D deficiency on birth size.DesignA cross-sectional study.SettingData were collected from pregnant women who delivered during April to May 2010 at 306 Hospital of PLA in Beijing, China.SubjectsParticipants in the study were seventy healthy nulliparous pregnant women with singleton pregnancies who delivered healthy babies at full term and their newborns.ResultsSevere vitamin D deficiency (25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) < 25 nmol/l) was detected in 54·5 % of mothers and 46·6 % of newborns. Neither mothers nor newborns had serum 25(OH)D concentrations that reached the normal level (>75 nmol/l). The concentration of 25(OH)D in mothers was positively correlated with that in cord blood (r = 0·89, P < 0·001). Newborns of mothers with severe vitamin D deficiency had lower birth length and birth weight. The head circumference and birth weight were lower in vitamin D-deficient newborns.ConclusionsThe study indicates that pregnant women and neonates residing in Beijing are at high risk of vitamin D deficiency. Neonatal 25(OH)D concentrations are dependently related to maternal 25(OH)D levels. Maternal and neonatal vitamin D status influences newborn size. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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