Higher Vitamin D Levels in Middle Age Are Tied to Lower Dementia Risk

Staff
By Staff
7 Min Read

People who have higher vitamin D levels as they enter middle age might have a reduced risk of developing dementia, a new study suggests.

For the study, researchers measured vitamin D blood levels for about 800 adults without dementia, who were 39 years old on average when the study began. Then, about 16 years later when people were in their mid-fifties, participants had PET scans of their brains to measure the accumulation of tau and beta-amyloid proteins, substances tied to greater dementia risk.

Researchers found that adults with higher vitamin D levels at the start of the study had lower levels of tau protein on brain scans taken later in middle age, according to findings published in the journal Neurology Open Access.

“Vitamin D may play an important role in preventing, or slowing down, changes of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia in the brain,” says the senior study author, Emer McGrath, MB, PhD, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Galway and a consultant neurologist at Galway University Hospital in Ireland.

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