Saturday, April 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Low vitamin D levels cause Alzheimer’s Disease: Study

Darpan News Desk, 23 Jan, 2017 10:41 AM
  • Low vitamin D levels cause Alzheimer’s Disease: Study
A new scientific study published in Neurology from researchers at McGill University has provided evidence to support vitamin D as a causal risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The McGill study found that lower vitamin D levels increased the risk of Alzheimer’s disease by 25% using a Mendelian randomization (MR) methodology which minimizes bias due to confounding or reverse causation.
 
Alzheimer’s disease is expected to double throughout the world in the next 20 years. The Alzheimer Society of Canada estimates that approximately 747,000 Canadians are living with some form of dementia.
 
There is no treatment that can effectively stop the progression of Alzheimer’s disease despite considerable effort. Therefore, disease prevention through modifiable risk factors where possible is critical. Ensuring vitamin D sufficiency through increased non-burning sun exposure in summer or vitamin D supplementation may be a cost-effective approach to help reduce Alzheimer’s disease risk.
 
“The strength of the Mendelian randomization (MR) approach is that it examines the genetic determinants of vitamin D status which are less likely to be influenced by confounding and reverse causation,” says first author, Lauren Mokry, MSc, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McGill University. “I think our paper in combination with the concordant results of meta-analysis offers strong evidence for a positive role of vitamin D in AD etiology.”
 
The authors concluded: “Our results provide evidence supporting 25OHD (vitamin D) as a causal risk factor for Alzheimer disease (AD). These findings provide further rationale to understand the effect of vitamin D supplementation on cognition and AD risk in randomized controlled trials.”
 
Evidence that vitamin D plays a role in Alzheimer’s disease risk continues to mount. In 2015, a meta-analysis study was published in Nutrition Journal which showed that subjects with deficient vitamin D status, <50 nmol/L, had a 21% increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease compared to people with vitamin D levels > 50 nmol/L.
 

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

New study shows higher levels of vitamin D can lower risk of cancer

Published in the journal PLOS ONE and authored by a team from Creighton University, University of California, San Diego and GrassrootsHealth, the research found a 67% reduction in risk for all cancers in women with vitamin D levels > 100 nmol/L (40 ng/ml) compared to womenwith vitamin D levels < 50 nmol/L (20 ng/ml). 

New study shows higher levels of vitamin D can lower risk of cancer

World Health Day focus on diabetes encourages taking charge to live well

World Health Day focus on diabetes encourages taking charge to live well
  Diabetes increases a person’s risk for many serious complications such as heart attack, stroke, kidney failure leading to dialysis, and blindness. Nevertheless, for many people it is possible to live a healthy, full life with diabetes.

World Health Day focus on diabetes encourages taking charge to live well

Get that Beach Body

Get that Beach Body
Losing weight and toning up take time, and a lot of people make the mistake of waiting until summer is already upon them. 

Get that Beach Body

Have you heard about Hearing Loss?

Have you heard about Hearing Loss?
Understand its effects and how it just might affect you.

Have you heard about Hearing Loss?

New First In Class Injectable Treatment for ‘Double Chin’ Now Available in Canada

Facial aesthetic treatments to date have been focused on wrinkles, discolouration, volume loss an...

New First In Class Injectable Treatment for ‘Double Chin’ Now Available in Canada

Keep your New Year’s resolution going

Keep your New Year’s resolution going
Here we are at the beginning of 2016, and you know what that means – new goals, big plans, and let’s face it, the definite possibility that those plans or goals won’t come to fruition. You know what I’m talking about – yet another round of New Year’s resolutions. 

Keep your New Year’s resolution going