A national survey designed to estimate the prevalence of common chronic conditions and associated risk factors was conducted in the US between 1988 and 1994 (NHANES III). It provided a database which is constantly mined for information about specific questions. A study based on this data was recently published which addresses the question of the association between vitamin D status and the prevalence of risk factors for cardiovas cu lar disease (CVD) using the vitamin D serum marker 25-hydroxyvitamin D.
Data for over 15,000 adult participants were available. When individuals with 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels less than 52 nmol/L were compared with those with levels equal to or greater than 92 nmol/L, it was found that those in the low-level group had significantly higher probabilities of have hypertension, abnormal blood glucose, history of diabetes, obesity, and high triglycerides. However, for two prominent risk factors, high total cholesterol or non-HDL cholesterol, no correlations were found.
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