Journal of Medical and Health Science
Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): July

Progressive Worsening of Vitamin D Deficiency Is Associated With Adverse Clinical Outcomes in Surgical Intensive Care Unit Patients

Ahmed Bassam Rasheed (M.B.Ch.B/F.I.B.M.S - PATH Senior specialist in Chemical pathology Ibn- Albaitar specialist center for cardiac surgery .Baghdad Iraq)
Zahraa Kamil Yousif (M.B.Ch.B / F.I.B.M.S/ C.A.B.A&IC Senior Anesthesiologist Ghazi AL- Hariri hospital/medical city Baghdad)
Ahmed Amer Abdulhussein (M.B.Ch.B/ C.A.B.EM Senior specialist in emergency medicine , ICU fellowship Ghazi AL- Hariri specialized hospital - medical city complex Baghdad)
Marwah Mohammed Qasim (M.B.Ch.B/FIBMS/A&IC Senior specialist anaesthesia and ICU Ghazi AL Hariri specialized hospital/ medical city complex Baghdad)
Ahmed Hashim Hammoodi (M.B.Ch.B / D.A./ C.A.B.A&IC Consultant Anesthesiologist Gazi AL Hariri for Surgical Specialties Hospital/Medical City Baghdad)



Article Info

Publish Date
29 May 2026

Abstract

General Background: Vitamin D deficiency is recognized as a major nutritional disorder associated with immune dysregulation, prolonged hospitalization, and increased mortality in critically ill populations. Specific Background: Surgical intensive care unit (SICU) patients are particularly vulnerable to hypovitaminosis D because of severe physiological stress, limited nutritional intake, and reduced sunlight exposure during hospitalization. Knowledge Gap: Despite increasing evidence linking vitamin D deficiency with adverse outcomes, limited prospective data are available regarding the severity distribution and prognostic significance of vitamin D deficiency among surgical ICU patients in Iraq. Aims: This study evaluated the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency and its association with clinical outcomes among SICU patients admitted to Ghazi AL Hariri Hospital for Surgical Specialties, Baghdad. Results: A prospective cohort study involving 240 SICU patients demonstrated that severe vitamin D deficiency was present in 53.5% of participants, while only 1.2% had normal vitamin D status. Severe deficiency was associated with prolonged SICU stay, increased treatment costs, and higher mortality rates. Patients with severe deficiency showed a mean SICU stay of 15.33 days, significantly longer than those with moderate or mild deficiency (P = 0.002). Multivariate analysis confirmed vitamin D deficiency as an independent predictor of adverse clinical outcomes. Novelty: The study introduces severity-based vitamin D classification in SICU patients and demonstrates its prognostic relevance in a critically ill surgical population. Implications: Early screening and correction of vitamin D deficiency may support risk stratification and clinical management strategies in surgical intensive care settings. Highlights: • Severe hypovitaminosis D predominated among critically ill surgical patients admitted to SICU.• Longer intensive care hospitalization was identified in patients with profound nutrient depletion.• Mortality and treatment expenditure increased across lower serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D categories. Keywords: Vitamin D Deficiency, Surgical Intensive Care Unit, Critical Illness, Mortality, Serum 25 Hydroxyvitamin D

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Journal Info

Abbrev

ANAMNETIC

Publisher

Subject

Decision Sciences, Operations Research & Management Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology Public Health

Description

Focus: Journal of Medical and Health Science aims to communicate the research results of professors, teachers, practitioners, and scientists in the fields of health information management and health science. The journal provides a platform for sharing significant and innovative findings that ...