Vitamin D and Your Brain- I recently read an article that correlates low vitamin D levels in the blood with higher levels of anxiety, depression and obsessive compulsive disorders.
Also discussed was the correlation between low vitamin D levels and Autism and Alzheimer's disease.
Autism
Approximately, 1 in 150 children born today will have autism. Autism affects boys at a rate four times that of girls.
No one can pin point the cause of autism and this is probably because there is likely to be more than one cause. However they all share at least two things in common.
Poor methylation (inability to use Vitamin B-12 to create whole proteins) and poor hydroxylation (inability to convert inactive Vitamin D into its active form).
Alzheimer's disease
Vitamin D may help reduce inflammation in the brain. A notable attribute of Alzheimer's disease victims is Vitamin D deficiency.
As with autism, those with Alzheimer's disease are afflicted with poor methylation (inability to use Vitamin B-12 to create whole proteins) and poor hydroxylation (inability to convert inactive vitamin D into its active form).
Methylation is measured by a blood test for homocysteine. And one of the ways to measure hydroxylation is with a blood test for Vitamin D.
Are autism and Alzheimer's disease related? At this point it is hard to say; perhaps it is even impossible to say that they are connected conditions. But they share remarkably similar imbalances in biochemistry and they share at least two common deficiencies: Vitamin B-12 and Vitamin D.
We can say with greater certainty than ever before that these imbalances are likely to be caused by toxicity, deficiency, injury and stress.

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