Abstract
Introduction
There has been a recent surge in the interest of the role of vitamin D in chronic musculoskeletal pain however there are limited studies that have investigated the link of vitamin D hypovitaminosis with low back pain. The aim of our study was to determine the prevalence of low vitamin D levels in patients who present with low back pain in an outpatient setting in the UK.
Methods
Data was collected retrospectively from computerised databases of all patients who presented with low back pain from a single spinal consultant's outpatient clinic and have had serum levels of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (25-OH vitamin D) requested. Data of these patients were collected from hospital electronic and paper records and analysed against their serum 25-OH vitamin D levels.
Results
Data on 229 patients was collected over an 18 month period. 19.7% of patients presenting to the spinal outpatient clinics had severe 25-OH vitamin D deficiency (less than 15 nmol/L) compared to 2.6% of 3132 non-spinal outpatient clinic patients (p<0.001). However, the percentage of patients with deficient (15 to 30 nmol/L) but not severe deficiency was similar in both groups (37.6% versus 38.3%). There was no significant difference in the incidence of vitamin D deficiency whether a surgical or non-surgical pathology was present or not (p=0.62).
Conclusion
We have found no link between vitamin D deficiency and low back pain in this study. Vitamin D deficiency is a common comorbidity in Leicester.