Effect of Malaria on Blood Levels of Vitamin E: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Published
August 12, 2023
Journal
Nutrients
PICOID
5d468d96
DOI
Citations
2
Keywords
Plasmodium, antioxidant, malaria, meta-analysis, systematic review, tocopherol, vitamin E
Copyright
Patients/Population/Participants

malaria patients, uninfected individuals

Intervention

vitamin E

Comparison

blood levels of vitamin E in malaria patients vs. uninfected individuals

Outcome

significantly lower vitamin E levels in malaria patients

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Vitamin E has an antioxidant property and is associated with protection against malaria. The current study used systematic review and meta-analysis approaches examining the variance in blood levels of vitamin E in malaria patients as compared with uninfected individuals. The protocol for the systematic review was registered with PROSPERO (CRD4202341481). Searches for pertinent studies were carried out on Embase, MEDLINE, Ovid, PubMed, Scopus, ProQuest, and Google Scholar. The combined effect estimate (Cohen's d) of the difference in vitamin E levels in malaria patients as compared with uninfected individuals was estimated using the random effects model. The searches yielded 2009 records, and 23 studies were included in the systematic review. The majority of the studies (80%) found that vitamin E levels were significantly lower in malaria patients than those who were not infected. Overall, the results revealed a significant reduction in blood levels of vitamin E in malaria patients when compared with uninfected individuals (

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