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. 2024 Feb 24;16(2):e54812. doi: 10.7759/cureus.54812

Table 1. Summary of studies on vitamin D and BPPV.

BPPV: Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo

Article Study design Study characteristics Main findings
Algarni et al. [21] Systematic review and meta-analysis Sample size = 1015; Consisting of three case-control studies and four cohort studies No difference in vitamin D levels between BPPV cases and controls; and low vitamin D levels are associated with recurrence
Inan et al. [22] Retrospective case-control study Sample size = 104 with 52 BPPV cases and 52 controls Higher rate of vitamin D deficiencies in BPPV patients
Ding et al. [23] Cross-sectional study Sample size = 522 with 174 BPPV cases and 348 normal individuals Low vitamin D levels in 62.1% of BPPV cases; and low levels of vitamin D in recurrent BPPV
Sarsitthithum et al. [24] Prospective-cross sectional study Sample size = 137 with 69 BPPV cases and 68 controls Low serum 25(OH)D in BPPV patients while no difference in vitamin D levels between recurrent and other patients
Meghji et al. [25] Retrospective review Sample size = 339 diagnosed cases of BPPV BPPV shows seasonal variability with vitamin D being lower in winters
Goldschagg et al. [26] Short communication Sample size = 680 with 158 cases of BPPV, 221 cases of vestibular disorders, and 301 cases of non-vestibular disorders No difference in vitamin D levels between BPPV patients and others