Vitamin D levels low in African Americans with multiple sclerosis

In the first major study exploring the connection between vitamin D and multiple sclerosis in African Americans, a team of scientists at the University of California, San Francisco has discovered that vitamin D levels in the blood are lower in African Americans who have the disease, compared to African Americans who do not.

"It seems relatively clear," said Ari Green, who is the assistant director of the UCSF Multiple Sclerosis Center, director of the UCSF Neurodiagnostics Center and the senior author on the study. "Low vitamin D levels are a risk factor for developing multiple sclerosis."

Published this week in the journal Neurology, the results of the study are consistent with observations in Caucasian populations that link low vitamin D levels to having multiple sclerosis. However, the research could not explain why multiple sclerosis tends to be more severe in African Americans even though the disease is less common than in Caucasian populations.

Earlier work by the same UCSF team established that African Americans tend to become disabled faster with multiple sclerosis, more frequently having to rely on canes and wheel chairs.

"If we can understand why, we may be able to improve treatment for those patients," said neurologist Bruce Cree, MD, PhD, another author of the paper and one of the primary investigators.

Vitamin D levels alone could not account for this apparent difference in severity, the study found.

"There are likely other factors that drive the severity of the disease including genes and other environmental factors such as smoking," said Jeffrey Gelfand, MD, the first author on the study. Work is now underway to determine how genetic differences may affect the severity of multiple sclerosis.

SUNLIGHT, VITAMIN D AND MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

Multiple sclerosis is a chronic disease in which a person's immune system periodically attacks the myelin sheaths that insulate nerve fibers in the brain and spinal cord. Damage to the sheaths can short circuit signals traveling along the nerve fibers, disrupting the normal flow of communication from the brain and causing a range of symptoms - including weakness, sensory disturbance, fatigue, visual impairments and loss of coordination.

Researchers at the UCSF Multiple Sclerosis Center have been investigating for a number of years how genetics and environmental triggers, like low vitamin D levels, can make people susceptible to multiple sclerosis.

Vitamin D is produced in the body in response to direct exposure to sunlight, and anything that limits this exposure also limits the amount of vitamin D a person produces.

How exactly low vitamin D levels contribute to causing multiple sclerosis is not clear, according to Green. Vitamin D may play a protective role for nerve cells or it may modulate the action of immune cells, preventing them from attacking the myelin around nerves. Nor is it clear what this observation means in terms of treatment, but ongoing clinical trials at UCSF led by neurologist Ellen Mowry, MD, are investigating whether taking vitamin D supplements impacts the course of the disease.

Previous studies have shown a dramatic link between vitamin D levels and multiple sclerosis - but only in Caucasian populations. Caucasians who live in tropical or subtropical climates are less likely to be diagnosed with multiple sclerosis than those who live in temperate climates. The prevalence of the disease in North Dakota, for instance, is approximately twice that in Florida.

These same questions have been harder to assess in African American populations, however, because the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency is extremely high among all African Americans.

Source: University of California - San Francisco

Comments

  1. Milton Hare Milton Hare United States says:

    Isn't it time for a public health policy that guarantees that African Americans and other darker-skinned populations are automatically screened for Vitamin D deficiency in all treatment settings?  Here's the truth of the matter: Widespread administration of Vitamin D3 to African-American communities would increase their lifespan by five to six years.  That's 150 million years of life extension in the US alone.  Morbidity associated with autoimmune disease - diabetes, high blood pressure, stroke, heart disease, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, multiple sclerosis, asthma - would all diminish.  So would cancer, tuberculosis, pneumonia and osteoporosis.  The literature is all there.  Why doesn't someone just do it?  Take ten primarily African-American zip codes around the US and mail each household a thousand 2000 mg vitamin D3 pills once annually and watch the hospitalization and death rates plummet.  Obama's healthcare plan would work just fine.  Doctors could concentrate on preventive medicine and the pharmaceutical industry would just have to -- deal with a precipitous drop in demand for their medications.  Preach it!  Yeah!  Mm-hmm!  So why aren't they giving it. Do they just not like us darker-skinned people?

  2. Milton Hare Milton Hare United States says:

    Isn't it time for a public health policy that guarantees that African Americans and other darker-skinned populations are automatically screened for Vitamin D deficiency in all treatment settings?  Here's the truth of the matter: Widespread administration of Vitamin D3 to African-American communities would increase their lifespan by five to six years.  That's 150 million years of life extension in the US alone.  Morbidity associated with autoimmune disease - diabetes, high blood pressure, stroke, heart disease, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, multiple sclerosis, asthma - would all diminish.  So would cancer, tuberculosis, pneumonia and osteoporosis.  The literature is all there.  Why doesn't someone just do it?  Take ten primarily African-American zip codes around the US and mail each household a thousand 2000 mg vitamin D3 pills once annually and watch the hospitalization and death rates plummet.  Obama's healthcare plan would work just fine.  Doctors could concentrate on preventive medicine and the pharmaceutical industry would just have to -- deal with a precipitous drop in demand for their medications.  Preach it!  Yeah!  Mm-hmm!  So why aren't they giving it. Do they just not like us darker-skinned people?

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
Post a new comment
Post

While we only use edited and approved content for Azthena answers, it may on occasions provide incorrect responses. Please confirm any data provided with the related suppliers or authors. We do not provide medical advice, if you search for medical information you must always consult a medical professional before acting on any information provided.

Your questions, but not your email details will be shared with OpenAI and retained for 30 days in accordance with their privacy principles.

Please do not ask questions that use sensitive or confidential information.

Read the full Terms & Conditions.

You might also like...
$1 million grant supports research on groundbreaking therapies for MS