Vitamin D and the occurrence of depression: Causal association or circumstantial evidence?

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Abstract

While recent laboratory-based studies have substantially advanced our understanding of the action of vitamin D in the brain, much is still unknown concerning how vitamin D relates to mood. The few epidemiological studies of vitamin D and depression have produced inconsistent results and generally have had substantial methodological limitations. Recent findings froma randomized trial suggest that high doses of supplemental vitamin D may improve mild depressive symptoms, but important questions persist concerning how vitamin D may affect monoamine function and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis response to stress, whether vitamin D supplementation can improve mood in individuals with moderate-to-severe depression, and whether vitamin D sufficiency is protective against incident depression and recurrence. At this time, it is premature to conclude that vitamin D status is related to the occurrence of depression. Additional prospective studies of this relationship are essential. © 2009 International Life Sciences Institute.

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Bertone-Johnson, E. R. (2009, August). Vitamin D and the occurrence of depression: Causal association or circumstantial evidence? Nutrition Reviews. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-4887.2009.00220.x

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