General Health Vitamin D insufficiency linked to Parkinson's disease
By Sue Mueller
Oct 13, 2008 - 3:35:18 PM
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Monday October 13, 2008 (foodconsumer.org) -- Parkinson's
disease may have a lot to do with vitamin D insufficiency, according to a new
study by researchers from Emory University School of Medicine.
The study led by Marian Evatt, MD, assistant professor of
neurology at Emory and colleagues found 55 percent of people with Parkinson's
disease were vitamin D insufficient compared to 41 percent among those with
Alzheimer's disease and 36 percent in healthy people.
But the study published in the October, 2008 issue of
Archives of Neurology in no way suggests Parkinson’s disease leads to the
insufficiency or vice versus.
The researchers initiated the study to evaluate the
possibility that neurodegenerative diseases lead to vitamin D insufficiency.
Ultra-violet B ray in sunshine is the most common source
for vitamin D.
Vitamin D is found in a
limited number of foods such as oily fish like salmon, fortified foods such as
juice and milk and some processed foods, and supplements.
"We found that vitamin D insufficiency may have a
unique association with Parkinson's, which is intriguing and warrants further
investigation," Evatt said.
The finding is understandable because people with
Parkinson's disease often have mobility problem and are seldom exposed to the
sun.
This means that it is likely that
these people lack vitamin D because they are exposed to less sunshine.
But low vitamin D levels may also be possibility
associated with some pathological process, condition, or disease.
Evatt said the observation is striking because study
subjects came from the southeast where vitamin D insufficiency is not expected
as common as in the north where exposure to sunlight is less common and
insufficiency of the vitamin could be more of a problem.
The researchers also found that the rate of vitamin D
deficiency among people with Parkinson's disease was also higher than that in
the Alzheimer's group and the healthy group, 23 percent versus 16 and 10
percent respectively.
The study involved 100 people with Parkinson's disease,
100 people with Alzheimer's and 100 healthy people who were recruited between
1992 and 2007.
Vitamin D insufficiency means that a person has less than
30 nanograms per milliliter of blood of the 25-hydroxy form (the major storage
form) of the vitamin while deficiency refers to a level of less than 20
nanograms per milliliter.
In addition to its role in maintaining bone health,
vitamin D has also been found to play a number of other roles including
producing antibacterial protein in the skin, regulating blood pressure, and
insulin levels and maintaining the nervous system.
Low vitamin D levels have been associated with a whole
range of chronic diseases including autoimmune disease, cancer and heart
disease.
Parkinson's disease may have something to do with vitamin
D insufficiency because early studies have found that in the part of the brain
affected by Parkinson's - the substantia nigra - has high levels of the vitamin
D receptor.
The study merely found that there was an association
between low levels of vitamin D and Parkinson's disease. But further research
is needed to determine if there is a causal relationship between the two.