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Saturday, June 2, 2012

Vitamin D Deficiency in India may be endemic, Be ware, Campaign for Vitamin D food fortification, a study from Trichy


We have been monitoring Vitamin D levels on a consecutive cohort of patients presenting to our hospital. The unpublished results showed 70 out of 85 consecutive patients tested for Vitamin D are deficient in this vitamin. Alarming Eh!

What does it actually mean? Vitamin D is an essential vitamin for the function of all our tissues and the bone in particular. But remember Vitamin D helps in absorption of calcium and keeps the balance with phosphate in the blood and the bone. Calcium is essential for the function of the bone, muscles, heart and the brain and all the tissues of our body.



If this vitamin is deficient, one would feel tired, body pain, back pain in particular, fracture our bones more easily. This vitamin is fortunately synthesized in our skin should we sufficient sun exposure with UV rays. "Maalai muzhudhum Vilayattu endru Vazhakkappaduthi kollu pappa" was sung by Subramania Bharathiyar makes sense for our children. This vilayattu should be outdoors with exposure to sunlight and not in front of our computers.

Deficiency in Vitamin D is termed, as Hypovitaminosis D. Hypovitaminosis D is also prevalent in children and the elderly living in developing world such as Latin America. Risk factors for Hypovitaminosis D in developing countries are similar to those reported in Western countries and include extremes of age, female sex, winter season, dark skin pigmentation, malnutrition, lack of sun exposure, a covered clothing style and obesity (Arabi et al). 
In a tropical country such as India, it is customary to expect Vitamin D deficiency to be rare due to the abundance of sunlight.  The prevalence of Hypovitaminosis D is considerably high in low latitudes. A survey by pediatricians at New Delhi's Kasturba Hospital earlier this year showed the presence of rickets among city children (Mudur et al). 

Vitamin D deficiency when clinically apparent is picked up by the clinicians though the presentation may not necessarily to one sub specialty..  Although severe vitamin D deficiency leading to rickets or osteomalacia is rare in Brazil, a developing country, there is accumulating evidence of the frequent occurrence of subclinical vitamin D deficiency, especially in elderly people (Bandeira et al). 

This sub clinical deficiency makes it even more difficult to quantify the true incidence of Vitamin D deficiency unless an epidemiological study across the whole nation is carried out. This would not be a priority in the national health planning in a country like India especially when the test itself is cost prohibitive.

In developed countries, food fortification has proven an effective and low-cost way to increase the micronutrient supply and reduce the consequences of micronutrient deficiencies. Fortified foods provide most of the vitamin D in the American diet. For example, almost all of the U.S. milk supply is voluntarily fortified with 100 IU/cup. 

In Canada, milk is fortified by law, “with 35–40 IU/100 mL, as is margarine at ≥530 IU/100 g” (Well et all). Other dairy products made from milk, such as cheese and ice cream, are generally not fortified. Certain breakfast cereals often contain added vitamin D, as do several brands of yogurt, margarine, orange juice, and other food products. Both the United States and Canada mandate the fortification of infant formula with vitamin D: 40–100 IU/100 kcal in the United States and 40–80 IU/100 kcal in Canada (Well et all).

In Europe, countries such as Finland have it mandatory to fortify the milk and milk products since 2003.[ Laaksi et al 2006]. Countries such as United Kingdom, Ireland, Scotland, Australia, and similar countries do not require fortification of foods though they allow optional fortification of staple foods such as breakfast cereals and margarine.

However majority of countries in the world do not use Fortification of foods to prevent Vitamin D deficiency. India is one of them.

Most of the studies have reported vitamin D deficiency in specific groups and speciality of medicine. This is a cohort study across all specialities in a multi speciality Hospital which helps us to understand the true incidence in patients attending a hospital. 

However we feel from this study of a very high incidence of clinical Vitamin D deficiency from a select group of patients presenting to a hospital may only be the tip of the iceberg. Even though an epidemiological study across the whole nation will truly reflect the real situation, would not be cost effective. 

As food fortification has rarely been used in the developing countries, we strongly recommend this as a cost effective option. It would be appropriate for a developing country like India as the risk factors for Vitamin D deficiency are the same as a developed country.

The cohort group showed a very high percentage of abnormality for a single test in a clinical situation. With the possibility of sub clinical Vitamin D deficiency, this study highlights the need for either a multi centric study to assess the true incidence in General population or 
simply Vitamin D fortification. 

Now what should we do? We need to campaign to the Government to bring on mandatory food fortification. This would reduce the incidence of this endemic in not only children but also the growing old age popuation who are often confined indoors. We are not going to get any support from the industry as the pharmaceutical companies are happy in selling vitamin D and Calcium supplements and making more money. 

We like to think that we should be taking medicines for every ailment, but in fact a lot of these ailments are preventable and this Vitamin D deficiency is one of them.

Please refer to the link on the side for the calcium rich foods that we can have but we need Vitamin D to help us to absorb the calcium from our diet.

Something to think about!

Best Wishes

Chockalingam

Wrist Arthroscopy at Kauvery Hospital Trichy in an young fit Defence Personnel

Technology has been rapidly catching up with our lives or one can say that our life has recently been spent catching up with the technology.

One should read the History of 20th century and especially the last twenty years of this century where great strides have been made in the technological revolution.

A Short History of the Twentieth Century

Medicine has been rather slow in catching up, but boy has it not caught up with it! Radiology, interventional, optics in scopy, computers in navigating surgery and robotics and so on and so forth.

The subject of this blog is arthroscopy which is a technique of viewing the inside of the joint to diagnose and more importantly to treat the joint ailments. Knees and shoulders are now optimally treated with arthroscopic techniques details of which we can go into another day.

The lesser known joints where this technique is useful are the wrists, elbows and ankles. A national security cadet had a wrist injury which caused him to be limited in his use of his left wrist and hand. he was unable to open a bottle by screwing the cap out. Of course he was not able to use the rifle which is essential in his line of duty.

The Magnetic resonance Imaging which shows the soft tissues well was performed on his wrist. this showed a torn cartilage. As you know the X rays which are used show only the bones. Majority of joint problems are to do with the cartilage and the ligaments which do not show on the X rays.

The availability of the technique of arthroscopy enabled us to look into his wrist without cutting it open and confirm the torn cartilage. The technology also allows us to repair the cartilage and in six weeks he was a happy person able to use his wrist as normal.

Now when i started training in Orthopaedics, we were excited to see the inside of the knee with a telescope, let alone do something inside. At present, "the advent of fibreoptics, high definition camera, power instruments and coablation techniques helping us to treat patients like this cadet in a second tier city in India" is remarkable.

Hats off to the Technology and Kudos to Kauvery Hospital in providing the technology to the people of Trichy and the surrounding Districts!

Best wishes

Chockalingam

Travel and be safe in India: Relative positioning of yourself with others in traffic and in life



Everything is relative, true or false?

In life to be rich, you have to have poor people

for you to be happy to with a big house, you need smaller houses

for you to be smartly dressed and be noted, people around need to be less smart.

Imagine if everyone has a uniform and look alike like the many Rajinis in Enthiran, you are not going to have handsome, beauty and ugly as descriptive words, eh!

now that you are getting the gist of what this is about, let us go to the relativity

Einstein described Relativity in space and time. Imagine that every vehicle on the road are going at exactly at 80 KM or miles per hour, then you cannot find a rude driver or a slow moving vehicle with an elderly couple you are going to be cross with!.

Hence you have speeding vehicles and slow moving or static vehicles or  objects.

Now let us get to accidents on the road which is where i am getting to! where you see yourselves at faster or slower relatively and hence increase the risk of an accident.

The accidents happen when two objects collide with each other when they are in different speeds to each other. hence for one to be as safe as possible, then you need to be away from contact with another body or vehicle which is in different speed to yourselves. Suppose you are driving in a car at 100km speed, then a lorry at 60 or a BMW at 140 Km or a static lorry parked in the main road, or a dog which comes in the middle of the road are all hazards.

If you remember my blog on hazards and risks, the risk of an accident increases when you have an hazard on your way.

but wait, you cannot avoid the hazard altogether. our roads in India are full of them. it could be a dog or a bull or a parked lorry or slow moving tractor or the crazy driver who horns and drives too close to you in the Scorpio or a bus who decides to drive towards you on the wrong side of a national highway!!!!!!!!!!!

If you are following so far, you would have understood that neither going fast or slow  is safe, to reduce the risk of an accident. in other words, going slow or be static is not safe in roads. remember the polio patient of mine who was static at a traffic light in red got hit by a moving lorry. He thought it was safe to stop at red signal but relative to the lorry behind,  he did the wrong thing by being static!

Hence, keep yourselves or your vehicle in equal or near equal in speed relative to the object or the other vehicles on the road!

this is one way of saying "keep your speed according to the traffic around you or the object near you" in a complicated way! In other words if everyone is doing a speed of 60, reduce your speed to near 60 until you get out of their way or they get out of your way

Or if you are near a static object reduce your speed to near 0 Km to avoid a crash

Or if the road is clear, then hit the pedal!!!!, but make sure your Vehicles brakes and tires are in top notch! and you are sober to use them!!!!

Best Wishes

Chockalingam