Print

Print


Lack Of Vitamin D Linked To Parkinson's Disease
ScienceDaily (Oct. 17, 2008) - A majority of Parkinson's disease patients 
had insufficient levels of vitamin D in a new study from Emory University 
School of Medicine.

The fraction of Parkinson's patients with vitamin D insufficiency, 55 
percent, was significantly more than patients with Alzheimer's disease (41 
percent) or healthy elderly people (36 percent).
The finding adds to evidence that low vitamin D is associated with 
Parkinson's, says first author Marian Evatt, MD, assistant professor of 
neurology at Emory.
Evatt is assistant director of the Movement Disorders Program at Wesley 
Woods Hospital. The senior author is endocrinologist Vin Tangpricha, MD, 
assistant professor of medicine at Emory and director of the Endocrine 
Clinical Research Unit.
Evatt says her team compared Parkinson's patients to Alzheimer's patients 
because they wanted to evaluate the possibility that neurodegenerative 
diseases in general lead to vitamin D insufficiency.
Most Americans get the majority of their vitamin D from exposure to sunlight 
or by dietary supplements; fortified foods such as milk and packaged cereals 
are a minor source. Only a few foods in nature contain substantial amounts 
of vitamin D, such as salmon and tuna.
The body's ability to produce vitamin D using UV-B radiation from the sun 
decreases with age, making older individuals at increased risk of vitamin D 
deficiency.
"We found that vitamin D insufficiency may have a unique association with 
Parkinson's, which is intriguing and warrants further investigation," Evatt 
says.
The connection could come partly because patients with Parkinson's have 
mobility problems and are seldom exposed to the sun, or because low vitamin 
D levels are in some way related to the genesis or progression of the 
disease.
She says her team saw their results as striking because their study group 
came from the Southeast, not a region with long gloomy winters, where 
vitamin D insufficiency is thought to be more of a problem.
In addition, the study found that the fraction of patients with the lowest 
levels of vitamin D, described as vitamin D deficiency, was higher (23 
percent) in the Parkinson's group than the Alzheimer's group (16 percent) or 
the healthy group (10 percent).
The retrospective study examined 100 people in each group, who were 
recruited between 1992 and 2007. Every fifth Parkinson's patient from 
Emory's clinical neurology database was selected, then healthy controls and 
patients with Alzheimer's disease were matched on age and state of 
residence.
Vitamin D insufficiency is frequently defined as less than 30 nanograms per 
milliliter of blood of the 25-hydroxy form (the major storage form) of the 
vitamin and deficiency as less than 20 nanograms per milliliter. However, 
most experts agree insufficiency warrants treatment and should not be 
ignored.
Doctors have known for decades that vitamin D plays a role in bone 
formation, Evatt says. More recently, scientists have been uncovering its 
effects elsewhere, including producing peptides that fight microbes in the 
skin, regulating blood pressure and insulin levels, and maintaining the 
nervous system. Low vitamin D levels also appear to increase the risk of 
several cancers and auto-immune diseases such as multiple sclerosis and 
diabetes.
Parkinson's disease affects nerve cells in several parts of the brain, 
particularly those that use the chemical messenger dopamine to control 
movement. The most common symptoms are tremor, stiffness and slowness of 
movement. These can be treated with oral replacement of dopamine.
Previous studies have shown that the part of the brain affected most by 
Parkinson's, the substantia nigra, has high levels of the vitamin D 
receptor, which suggests vitamin D may be important for normal functions of 
these cells, Evatt says.
Emory clinicians are conducting further research to investigate whether 
vitamin D insufficiency is a cause or possibly a result of having 
Parkinson's. In a pilot study, Parkinson's patients are receiving either 
standard or larger doses of vitamin D, with an eye towards possibly reducing 
the severity of their condition.
The research was funded by the National Center for Research Resources, the 
National Institute of Aging and the National Institute of Environmental 
Health Sciences of the National Institutes of Health, and by an anonymous 
donor.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
[log in to unmask] 

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn