Vitamin D and cardio-metabolic biomarkers: small-scale comparative study between Libyan migrants and resident women in Serbia

2019
Authors
Vidović, Nevena Đ.
Faid, Fathia
Pantović, Ana

Nikolić, Marina
Debeljak-Martačić, Jasmina

Zeković, Milica T.

Milešević, Jelena

Drah, Mustafa Mohamed
Zec, Manja M.

Article (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Libyan women are at high risk of vitamin D deficiency, mostly due to their lifestyle and low exposure to sun. In the last decades, Libyan residents have been forced to seek refuge in countries such as Serbia, a country with high incidence of cardio-metabolic diseases. Serbian residents tend to be deficient in vitamin D, mostly due to the lack of vitamin D fortification policy. The aim of this study was to evaluate vitamin D status in Libyan adult women migrating to Serbia, with the assessment of cardio-metabolic and nutritional biomarkers, including erythrocytes fatty acid composition, magnesium concentration, and dietary intake. The same markers were measured in Serbian women, and comparisons between the groups were made. Despite low vitamin D dietary intake in both study groups, we observed lower plasma vitamin D status in Libyan women. This was accompanied by a significantly lower concentration of magnesium in Libyan women. Libyan women had significantly higher omega-3 index and low...er n-6/n-3 ratio in erythrocytes' phospholipids. We observed significant negative correlation between vitamin D and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) concentrations in both study groups. Despite lower vitamin D status in the Libyan group, erythrocyte fatty acid composition, along with blood lipids' concentrations, indicated a lower cardiovascular risk. Based on our results, the discrepancy in the vitamin D status could not be ascribed to the participants' dietary intake of the micronutrient, rather is potentially associated with ethnic-specific cardio-metabolic profile, which should be confirmed in larger cohorts.
Keywords:
Libyan women / magnesium / polyunsaturated fatty acids / Serbian women / vitamin DSource:
Libyan Journal of Medicine, 2019, 14, 1Publisher:
- Taylor & Francis Ltd, Abingdon
Funding / projects:
- Biological effects, nutritional intake and status of folate and polysaturate fatty acid (PUFA): improvement of nutrition in Serbia (RS-41030)
- Libyan Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research
DOI: 10.1080/19932820.2019.1622364
ISSN: 1993-2820
PubMed: 31146648
WoS: 000471792500001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85067181616
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Institut za medicinska istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Vidović, Nevena Đ. AU - Faid, Fathia AU - Pantović, Ana AU - Nikolić, Marina AU - Debeljak-Martačić, Jasmina AU - Zeković, Milica T. AU - Milešević, Jelena AU - Drah, Mustafa Mohamed AU - Zec, Manja M. PY - 2019 UR - http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/973 AB - Libyan women are at high risk of vitamin D deficiency, mostly due to their lifestyle and low exposure to sun. In the last decades, Libyan residents have been forced to seek refuge in countries such as Serbia, a country with high incidence of cardio-metabolic diseases. Serbian residents tend to be deficient in vitamin D, mostly due to the lack of vitamin D fortification policy. The aim of this study was to evaluate vitamin D status in Libyan adult women migrating to Serbia, with the assessment of cardio-metabolic and nutritional biomarkers, including erythrocytes fatty acid composition, magnesium concentration, and dietary intake. The same markers were measured in Serbian women, and comparisons between the groups were made. Despite low vitamin D dietary intake in both study groups, we observed lower plasma vitamin D status in Libyan women. This was accompanied by a significantly lower concentration of magnesium in Libyan women. Libyan women had significantly higher omega-3 index and lower n-6/n-3 ratio in erythrocytes' phospholipids. We observed significant negative correlation between vitamin D and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) concentrations in both study groups. Despite lower vitamin D status in the Libyan group, erythrocyte fatty acid composition, along with blood lipids' concentrations, indicated a lower cardiovascular risk. Based on our results, the discrepancy in the vitamin D status could not be ascribed to the participants' dietary intake of the micronutrient, rather is potentially associated with ethnic-specific cardio-metabolic profile, which should be confirmed in larger cohorts. PB - Taylor & Francis Ltd, Abingdon T2 - Libyan Journal of Medicine T1 - Vitamin D and cardio-metabolic biomarkers: small-scale comparative study between Libyan migrants and resident women in Serbia IS - 1 VL - 14 DO - 10.1080/19932820.2019.1622364 ER -
@article{ author = "Vidović, Nevena Đ. and Faid, Fathia and Pantović, Ana and Nikolić, Marina and Debeljak-Martačić, Jasmina and Zeković, Milica T. and Milešević, Jelena and Drah, Mustafa Mohamed and Zec, Manja M.", year = "2019", abstract = "Libyan women are at high risk of vitamin D deficiency, mostly due to their lifestyle and low exposure to sun. In the last decades, Libyan residents have been forced to seek refuge in countries such as Serbia, a country with high incidence of cardio-metabolic diseases. Serbian residents tend to be deficient in vitamin D, mostly due to the lack of vitamin D fortification policy. The aim of this study was to evaluate vitamin D status in Libyan adult women migrating to Serbia, with the assessment of cardio-metabolic and nutritional biomarkers, including erythrocytes fatty acid composition, magnesium concentration, and dietary intake. The same markers were measured in Serbian women, and comparisons between the groups were made. Despite low vitamin D dietary intake in both study groups, we observed lower plasma vitamin D status in Libyan women. This was accompanied by a significantly lower concentration of magnesium in Libyan women. Libyan women had significantly higher omega-3 index and lower n-6/n-3 ratio in erythrocytes' phospholipids. We observed significant negative correlation between vitamin D and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) concentrations in both study groups. Despite lower vitamin D status in the Libyan group, erythrocyte fatty acid composition, along with blood lipids' concentrations, indicated a lower cardiovascular risk. Based on our results, the discrepancy in the vitamin D status could not be ascribed to the participants' dietary intake of the micronutrient, rather is potentially associated with ethnic-specific cardio-metabolic profile, which should be confirmed in larger cohorts.", publisher = "Taylor & Francis Ltd, Abingdon", journal = "Libyan Journal of Medicine", title = "Vitamin D and cardio-metabolic biomarkers: small-scale comparative study between Libyan migrants and resident women in Serbia", number = "1", volume = "14", doi = "10.1080/19932820.2019.1622364" }
Vidović, N. Đ., Faid, F., Pantović, A., Nikolić, M., Debeljak-Martačić, J., Zeković, M. T., Milešević, J., Drah, M. M.,& Zec, M. M.. (2019). Vitamin D and cardio-metabolic biomarkers: small-scale comparative study between Libyan migrants and resident women in Serbia. in Libyan Journal of Medicine Taylor & Francis Ltd, Abingdon., 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/19932820.2019.1622364
Vidović NĐ, Faid F, Pantović A, Nikolić M, Debeljak-Martačić J, Zeković MT, Milešević J, Drah MM, Zec MM. Vitamin D and cardio-metabolic biomarkers: small-scale comparative study between Libyan migrants and resident women in Serbia. in Libyan Journal of Medicine. 2019;14(1). doi:10.1080/19932820.2019.1622364 .
Vidović, Nevena Đ., Faid, Fathia, Pantović, Ana, Nikolić, Marina, Debeljak-Martačić, Jasmina, Zeković, Milica T., Milešević, Jelena, Drah, Mustafa Mohamed, Zec, Manja M., "Vitamin D and cardio-metabolic biomarkers: small-scale comparative study between Libyan migrants and resident women in Serbia" in Libyan Journal of Medicine, 14, no. 1 (2019), https://doi.org/10.1080/19932820.2019.1622364 . .