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The synergistic interaction of vitamin D deficiency and insomnia on dizziness-related handicap in patients with benign paroxysmal positional vertigo.

Bo Tang, Minghua Luo, Dan Wang, Yuqin He, Chuang Zhang et al.
Other Frontiers in neurology 2025 1 Zitierungen
PubMed DOI PDF
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Study Design

Studientyp
observational/cross-sectional study
Intervention
The synergistic interaction of vitamin D deficiency and insomnia on dizziness-related handicap in patients with benign paroxysmal positional vertigo. None
Vergleichsgruppe
Placebo
Wirkungsrichtung
Positive
Verzerrungsrisiko
Moderate

Abstract

BACKGROUND: While insomnia and vitamin D deficiency are known risk factors for BPPV, their interactive effect on the dizziness-related handicap is unknown. Given that both may independently promote pro-inflammatory states, a synergistic interaction is biologically plausible. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate both the independent and interactive effects of insomnia and 25-OH-D levels on the dizziness-related handicap in BPPV patients. We specifically hypothesized that insomnia amplifies the detrimental impact of low vitamin D, aiming to provide an empirical basis for integrated clinical management strategies. METHODS: In this cross-sectional study, 125 patients with BPPV were enrolled. Serum 25-OH-D levels and Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI) scores were measured. A multivariable linear regression model, refined by a systematic variable selection procedure, was used to assess the effects of insomnia and 25-OH-D on log-transformed DHI scores after adjusting for potential confounders. RESULTS: After multivariable adjustment in the final parsimonious model, insomnia, lower 25-OH-D levels, and their interaction term all remained highly significant predictors of higher dizziness-related handicap (all p < 0.01). The interaction indicated that the negative association between 25-OH-D and DHI was significantly stronger in patients with insomnia. CONCLUSION: Insomnia and vitamin D deficiency are independently associated with greater dizziness-related handicap in BPPV patients, and they demonstrate a significant synergistic interaction. However, due to the study's design, a definitive causal relationship cannot be established. Assessing and managing both conditions may be crucial for mitigating the handicap imposed by BPPV.

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Figures

Tables

Table 1

CharacteristicOverallNoYesp-value
Gender (Female), n (%)34 (27.2%)20 (34.5%)14 (20.9%)0.091
Age (years), mean (SD)57.5 (13.9)57.0 (14.2)58.1 (13.6)0.598
BMI (kg/m2), mean (SD)23.6 (3.4)23.3 (3.0)23.9 (3.7)0.422
Smoke, n (%)18 (14.4%)4 (6.9%)14 (20.9%)0.033
Alcohol drinking, n (%)6 (4.8%)0 (0%)6 (9.0%)0.031
Hypertension, n (%)39 (31.2%)6 (10.3%)33 (49.3%)<0.001
Diabetes, n (%)14 (11.2%)2 (3.4%)12 (17.9%)0.010
25-OH-D (ng/mL), median [IQR]16.8 [12.2–22.1]19.1 [14.5–22.4]14.4 [11.6–21.0]0.024
DHI, median [IQR]34.0 [22.0–56.0]22.0 [16.5–24.0]54.0 [48.0–60.0]<0.001
Vit D Insufficiency (<30 ng/mL), n (%)105 (84.0%)44 (75.9%)61 (91.0%)0.027

Table 2

Characteristic β 95% CIp-value
Age (per year)−0.01−0.02, 0.000.052
Gender (Male vs. Female)0.490.26, 0.72<0.001
Insomnia (Yes vs. No)2.151.83, 2.47<0.001
25-OH-D (per ng/mL)−0.02−0.03, −0.000.015
Insomnia (Yes vs. No) * 25-OH-D (per ng/mL)−0.05−0.07, −0.03<0.001

References

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