Scientific American News
Could some cases of schizophrenia boil down to something as simple as
 vitamin D deficiency? The idea was first put forth more than a decade 
ago by schizophrenia researcher John McGrath of the University of 
Queensland in Australia. The circumstantial evidence fit: people born in
 winter or spring or at high latitudes are at slightly increased risk of
 developing schizophrenia, and vitamin D deficiency is also more common 
in winter months and at high latitudes because of lack of sunlight. It 
may be that a deficit of vitamin D leaves expecting mothers more 
vulnerable to illnesses such as influenza, which could in turn sensitize the maturing brain to stress-related damage later in life. [For more on how prenatal infections can lead to mental illness, see “Infected with Insanity,” by Melinda Wenner; Scientific American Mind, April/May 2008.]
Now McGrath and his colleagues have put the hypothesis to the test. 
They analyzed blood samples taken from 424 Danish newborns who went on 
to develop schizophrenia as well as an equal number of babies who never 
acquired the disease. In each sample, they measured the amount of the 
chemical 25OHD, which the body converts into vitamin D. The researchers 
found that infants who had low levels of 25OHD in their blood—and 
therefore mothers who were deficient in vitamin D while they were 
pregnant—were at a higher risk of developing schizophrenia when they 
grew up.
The result, published in the September issue of Archives of General Psychiatry,
 could be especially interesting for communities of black immigrants 
living in northern countries. Researchers have found a striking increase
 in schizophrenia risk for the children of dark-skinned migrants living
 at high latitudes—a finding neatly explained if vitamin D plays a role,
 because dark skin blocks ultraviolet B radiation, the component of 
sunlight necessary for the body to synthesize vitamin D.
There are some loose ends to tie up, however, before recommending 
vitamin D supplements for at-risk mothers. The group found that infants 
with high levels of 25OHD were also at increased schizophrenia risk. 
McGrath speculates that these infants might have been relatively 
incapable of generating vitamin D, leading to a buildup of the 
precursor in their blood—but more research is necessary to say for sure.
 All told, 44 percent of the schizophrenia cases in the study were 
attributable to either low or high vitamin D levels. “Even if vitamin D 
supplements can prevent only a small fraction of schizophrenia,” McGrath
 says, “it will be a fantastic outcome.”

 
No comments:
Post a Comment