Association between serum 25-hydroxy vitamin D level and menstrual cycle length and regularity: A cross-sectional observational study

Research examining the role of vitamin D deficiency and the development of menstrual disorders in women is of widespread interest. Studies have been published showing that supplementation with high-dose vitamin D can lead to the restoration of the menstrual cycle. We lack adequate information regard...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of reproductive biomedicine (Yazd, Iran) Iran), 2021-11, Vol.19 (11), p.979-986
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Vinita, Tamar, Neelam, Lone, Zamir, Das, Esha, Sahu, Rajshree, Majumdar, Sagarika
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Research examining the role of vitamin D deficiency and the development of menstrual disorders in women is of widespread interest. Studies have been published showing that supplementation with high-dose vitamin D can lead to the restoration of the menstrual cycle. We lack adequate information regarding the effect of vitamin D levels on the physiology of menstruation and further on fertility in women of reproductive age due to the contradictory results reported by studies. To study the association of 25-hydroxy vitamin D with menstrual cycle characteristics including long and short cycle length and cycle irregularity. In this cross-sectional study, serum vitamin D levels of 166 women attending an outpatient department with menstrual irregularities after excluding all obvious causes of menstrual disorders (n = 83) between April-June 2019 were measured and were compared with women of similar profiles with complaints other than menstrual irregularities (n = 83). A decreased level of vitamin D was associated with a 13.3 times odds of an irregular cycle (OR (95% CI): 13.30 (5.79-30.60), p 0.001). 25-hydroxy vitamin D was not associated with age or body mass index. We found a significant difference (p 0.001) in mean vitamin D levels among the females with irregular cycles vs. regular cycles. Vitamin D plays a role in the physiology of reproduction specific to the menstrual cycle and ovulation. Long-term prospective studies assessing the exact cutoff value and the exact dose of supplementation required are needed.
ISSN:2476-4108
2476-3772
DOI:10.18502/ijrm.v19i11.9913