What the study found
Combining pulmonary rehabilitation, a structured program used to improve breathing and physical function, with vitamin D supplementation produced superior pulmonary function test outcomes in patients with mild to moderate asthma.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that adding vitamin D supplementation to structured pulmonary rehabilitation may be a safe, feasible, and potentially synergistic strategy to optimize asthma management.
What the researchers tested
The article compares the effects of pulmonary rehabilitation, vitamin D supplementation, and their combination on pulmonary function tests in patients with mild to moderate asthma.
What worked and what didn't
Pulmonary rehabilitation alone and vitamin D supplementation alone each improved pulmonary function in patients with mild to moderate asthma. The combination produced better outcomes than either intervention alone, according to the abstract.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not describe the study design, sample size, duration, or specific pulmonary function tests used. It also does not provide detailed limitations beyond the scope of mild to moderate asthma.
Key points
- Pulmonary rehabilitation and vitamin D supplementation each improved pulmonary function in mild to moderate asthma.
- The combination of the two interventions produced superior outcomes.
- The authors describe the combined approach as safe, feasible, and potentially synergistic.
- The abstract does not state the study design, sample size, or duration.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Vitamin D plus rehabilitation improved asthma lung function
- Authors:
- Ambreen Fatima, Rahul Saxena, Devendra Kumar Singh, Sachin Gupta
- Institutions:
- Sharda University, Galgotias University
- Publication date:
- 2026-03-20
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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