Low levels of vitamin D in patients with autoimmune disease may be a result rather than a cause of the disease, and supplementing with this nutrient may worsen a patient's condition,
Low levels of vitamin D in patients with autoimmune disease may be a result rather than a cause of the disease, and supplementing with this nutrient may worsen a patient's condition, according to a review.
Researchers at the California-based non-profit Autoimmunity Research Foundation, who have authored the review, say that vitamin D may provide short-term relief by lowering inflammation, but it may exacerbate disease symptoms over the long-term.Written under the guidance of professor Trevor Marshall of Murdoch University, Western Australia, the paper mainly focuses on the actions of a form of vitamin D derived from food and supplements, known as 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-D).
The researchers say that 25-D inactivates rather than activates its native receptor, the Vitamin D nuclear receptor (VDR), and subsequently the immune response.
They say that this, though lowers the inflammation caused by bacteria, allows them to spread more easily in the long-run.
According to them, low levels of 25-D are frequently noted in patients with autoimmune disease because they are naturally down-regulated in response to VDR dysregulation by chronic pathogens.
Under such circumstances, supplementation with extra vitamin D may not only be counterproductive but harmful also, because it slows the ability of the immune system to deal with such bacteria.
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A research article on this study has been published in Autoimmunity Reviews.
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SRM