Mental Health Update | Joshua W. Miller, PhD, from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey, and colleagues examined the correlation between vitamin D status and trajectories of change in subdomains of cognitive function in a cohort of 382 ethnically diverse older adults.
- 41.4% white
- 29.6% African-American
- 25.1% Hispanic
- and 3.9% other race/ethnicity.
The researchers found that the mean 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD) level was 19.2 ng/mL; 26.2 and 35.1% of participants were vitamin D deficient and insufficient, respectively.
Compared with white participants, the mean 25-OHD levels were significantly lower for African-American and Hispanic participants (21.7 versus 17.9 and 17.2 ng/mL, respectively). The dementia group had significantly lower mean 25-OHD compared with the mild cognitive impairment and cognitively normal groups, respectively (16.2 versus 20 and 19.7 ng/mL, respectively).
"It remains to be determined whether vitamin D supplementation slows cognitive decline," the authors write.