An estimated 55 million people worldwide live with dementia, a number that’s expected to rise as the global population ages. To find treatments that can slow or stop the disease, scientists need to better understand the factors that can cause dementia.
Researchers at Tufts University have
completed the first study examining levels of vitamin D in brain tissue,
specifically in adults who suffered from varying rates of cognitive decline.
They found that members of this group with higher levels of vitamin D in their
brains had better cognitive function.
The study was published December 7
in Alzheimer’s
& Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association.
“This research reinforces the importance
of studying how food and nutrients create resilience to protect the aging brain
against diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease and other related dementias,” said
senior and corresponding author Sarah Booth, director of the Jean
Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts and
lead scientist of the HNRCA’s Vitamin K Team.
Vitamin D supports many functions in the
body, including immune responses and maintaining healthy bones. Dietary sources
include fatty fish and fortified beverages (such as milk or orange juice);
brief exposure to sunlight also provides a dose of vitamin D.
“Many studies have implicated dietary or
nutritional factors in cognitive performance or function in older adults,
including many studies of vitamin D, but all of them are based on either
dietary intakes or blood measures of vitamin D,” said lead author Kyla
Shea, a scientist on the Vitamin K Team and an associate professor at the
Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts.
“We wanted to know if vitamin D is even
present in the brain, and if it is, how those concentrations are linked to
cognitive decline.”
Booth, Shea, and their team examined
samples of brain tissue from 209 participants in the Rush Memory and Aging
Project, a long-term study of Alzheimer’s disease that began in 1997.
Researchers at Rush University assessed the cognitive function of the
participants, older people with no signs of cognitive impairment, as they aged,
and analyzed irregularities in their brain tissue after death.
In the Tufts study, researchers looked
for vitamin D in four regions of the brain—two associated with changes linked
to Alzheimer’s disease, one associated with forms of dementia linked to blood
flow, and one region without any known associations with cognitive decline
related to Alzheimer’s disease or vascular disease.
They found that vitamin D was indeed
present in brain tissue, and high vitamin D levels in all four regions of the
brain correlated with better cognitive function.
However, the levels of vitamin D in the
brain didn’t associate with any of the physiological markers associated with
Alzheimer’s disease in the brain studied, including amyloid plaque buildup,
Lewy body disease, or evidence of chronic or microscopic strokes. This means
it’s still unclear exactly how vitamin D might affect brain function.
“Dementia is multifactorial, and lots of
the pathological mechanisms underlying it have not been well characterized,”
Shea says. “Vitamin D could be related to outcomes that we didn’t look at yet,
but plan to study in the future.”
Vitamin D is also known to vary between
racial and ethnic populations, and most of the participants in the original
Rush cohort were white. The researchers are planning follow-up studies using a
more diverse group of subjects to look at other brain changes associated with
cognitive decline. They hope their work leads to a better understanding of the
role vitamin D may play in staving off dementia.
However, experts caution people not to
use large doses of vitamin D supplements as a preventive measure. The
recommended dose of vitamin D is 600 IU for people 1-70 years old, and 800
IU for those older—excessive amounts can cause harm, and have been linked to
the risk of falling.
“We now know that vitamin D is present in reasonable amounts in human brains, and it seems to be correlated with less decline in cognitive function,” Shea says. “But we need to do more research to identify the neuropathology that vitamin D is linked to in the brain before we start designing future interventions.”
Source: https://nutrition.tufts.edu/news/tufts-researchers-find-brains-more-vitamin-d-function-better4
Journal article: https://alz-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/alz.12836
Source: Brains With More Vitamin D Function
Better – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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