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Vitamin D Deficiency Linked to High Blood Pressure, Study
Vitamin D Deficiency Linked to High Blood Pressure, Study

Vitamin D Deficiency Linked to High Blood Pressure, Study

The benefits of vitamin D for patients with high blood pressure has been suggested before, but evidence has been sketchy.

In a new study, researchers were able to determine whether low levels of vitamin D had a causal link with high blood pressure more reliably than ever before, by measuring genetic variations which affect vitamin D levels and measuring them against blood pressure.

The current findings come from a Mendelian randomisation study that included data for over 146,500 patients of European ancestry from Europe and North America.

“Mendelian randomisation helps to determine cause and effect because by using genetic data we can better avoid confounding, reverse causation, and bias,” explains lead author of the study Professor Elina Hyppönen from the University of South Australia.

Hyppönen and colleagues used two common genetic variants known to affect levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D], a clinical marker of vitamin D status, to measure the relationship between vitamin D status and blood pressure and hypertension risk.

As reported in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, the team found that for each 10% increase in the concentration of 25(OH)D, the diastolic blood pressure and systolic blood pressure dropped by 0.29 mm Hg and 0.37 mm Hg, respectively. In addition, each 10% increase in 25(OH)D was associated with an 8.1% decrease in the likelihood of developing hypertension.

Hyppönen says the possibility that the findings were caused by chance still cannot be excluded and the results therefore need to be replicated in an independent, similarly powered study.

Hyppönen also suggests that as well as further randomised controlled trials being carried out to confirm causality, the potential clinical benefits of vitamin D supplementation should be studied: “In view of the costs and side effects associated with antihypertensive drugs, the potential to prevent or reduce blood pressure and therefore the risk of hypertension with vitamin D is very attractive.”

Agencies/Canadajournal




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