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Journal Article

Citation

Harwood RH, Sahota O, Gaynor K, Masud T, Hosking DJ. Age Ageing 2004; 33(1): 45-51.

Affiliation

Health Care of the Elderly, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7 2UH, UK. rowan.harwood@mail.qmcuh-tr.trent.nhs.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Oxford University Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

14695863

Abstract

BACKGROUND: survivors of hip fracture are at 5- to 10-fold risk of a second hip fracture. There is little consensus about secondary prevention. Many are given calcium and vitamin D, but the evidence supporting this is circumstantial. OBJECTIVE: to compare the effects of different calcium and vitamin D supplementation regimens on bone biochemical markers, bone mineral density and rate of falls in elderly women post-hip fracture. DESIGN: randomised controlled trial. SETTING: orthogeriatric rehabilitation ward. METHODS: 150 previously independent elderly women, recruited following surgery for hip fracture, were assigned to receive a single injection of 300,000 units of vitamin D(2), injected vitamin D(2) plus 1 g/day oral calcium, 800 units/day oral vitamin D(3) plus 1 g/day calcium, or no treatment. Follow-up was one year, with measurement of 25-hydroxyvitamin D, parathyroid hormone, bone mineral density, and falls. RESULTS: mean 25-hydroxyvitamin D increased and mean parathyroid hormone was suppressed in all the actively treated groups, more so in the group receiving combined oral vitamin D and calcium. Twenty per cent of participants injected with vitamin D were deficient in 25-hydroxyvitamin D a year later. Bone mineral density showed small but statistically significant differences of up to 4.6% between actively treated groups and placebo. Relative risk of falling in the groups supplemented with vitamin D was 0.48 (95% CI 0.26-0.90) compared with controls. CONCLUSION: Vitamin D supplementation, either orally or with injected vitamin D, suppresses parathyroid hormone, increases bone mineral density and reduces falls. Effects may be more marked with calcium co-supplementation. The 300,000 units of injected vitamin D may not last a whole year.


Language: en

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