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A study found that lower vitamin D levels at age 39 were linked to Alzheimer’s-related brain changes 16 years later.

Vitamin D's Effects Decades LaterPeople in their late 30s are still sharp as ever, with no sign of memory problems. However, vitamin D levels in their blood may already be shaping what their brain looks like in their 50s.

A recent study looked at vitamin D levels in midlife and then examined participants’ brain scans about 16 years later, with participants still showing no signs of dementia. Those with lower vitamin D levels were more likely to show brain changes linked to Alzheimer’s disease.
“Addressing vitamin D deficiencies in midlife is particularly important because it targets the disease at a much earlier stage,” Martin Mulligan, the study’s lead author from the University of Galway, Ireland, told The Epoch Times. It provides a greater window of opportunity to intervene before memory loss or dementia symptoms begin, he added.

Vitamin D May Protect Against Early Brain Changes

The study, published in Neurology Open Access, used data from the Framingham Heart Study, a multigenerational, community-based cohort that has been continuously monitored for the development of dementia and cardiovascular disease.

Participants were around 39 years on average and did not have dementia or heart disease at the time of testing. Researchers measured blood vitamin D levels, and then looked for preclinical signs of dementia on brain scans an average of 16 years later—when participants were in their mid-50s and still showed no signs of dementia.

The scans measured amyloid and tau proteins, two hallmark proteins of Alzheimer’s disease. Amyloid forms plaques between brain cells, while tau forms tangles inside neurons; both can begin accumulating years before symptoms appear.

Participants had an average vitamin D level of 38 nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL), and about 34 percent had levels below 30 ng/mL, the study’s cutoff for sufficient vitamin D. Vitamin D levels of about 20 to 50 ng/mL are generally considered adequate for most people.

The results showed that participants with higher vitamin D levels in midlife had lower overall tau burden and less tau buildup in brain regions affected early in Alzheimer’s disease.

The findings remained significant even after accounting for factors such as age, sex, body mass index, blood pressure, diabetes history, and time between blood draw and brain scan.

Why Tau, and Not Amyloid?

The study found that vitamin D levels were not associated with amyloid deposition.

The tau finding—but not amyloid—may seem puzzling, but researchers have an explanation.

Tau protein may begin to accumulate in certain parts of the brain earlier in the disease process, while amyloid builds up more gradually over time. “Because this study focused on a younger population, we believe that the early effects on tau were simply more readily detectable in midlife, whereas significant amyloid accumulation happens much later in life,” Mulligan said.

Many studies suggest that amyloid builds up early and spreads more broadly across the brain, which may make it more readily detectable. Some research, by contrast, suggests that tau may begin earlier but remain confined to specific regions, such as the entorhinal cortex—a key memory-related region—even in people with no cognitive symptoms. In these early stages, tau can emerge and spread locally without amyloid, while amyloid may be needed for its wider spread across the brain.
Researchers also suggested that vitamin D may help move amyloid out of the brain and into the bloodstream, where it can be cleared—a mechanism that might only become measurable over a longer timeframe.

How Vitamin D May Protect the Brain

“Vitamin D is technically a steroid hormone, not a true vitamin,” Dr. Kat Toups, a functional medicine psychiatrist and clinical researcher, who wasn’t part of the study, told The Epoch Times. It acts throughout the body, including the brain, regulating hundreds of genes involved in immune function, brain health, and cell repair, she noted.

Tau is an essential protein that helps transport nutrients and signals through neurons. In Alzheimer’s disease, it becomes chemically altered, causing it to detach, misfold, and clump into tangles that disrupt the neuron’s transport system and eventually lead to cell death. Vitamin D appears to influence the enzymes involved in this process, helping prevent these tangles from forming.

Vitamin D helps maintain antioxidant systems that protect neurons from oxidative stress and inflammation, two processes known to accelerate tau damage. Vitamin D receptors are found throughout the brain—including memory-related regions such as the hippocampus—as well as in immune cells, meaning it can act directly in the brain and immune system to help regulate inflammation.

Inadequate vitamin D can also affect the growth and survival of neurons, further increasing vulnerability over time, Joshua Miller, a professor and chair of the department of nutritional sciences at Rutgers University in New Jersey, who authored a similar study on the link between vitamin D and dementia, told The Epoch Times.

Why Addressing It Earlier Matters

The findings suggest that maintaining adequate vitamin D levels earlier in life—rather than waiting until older age—may be important, as the window to influence disease processes is likely much larger before symptoms begin.

study of more than 260,000 adults found that low vitamin D levels were associated with a higher risk of developing dementia over time, with stronger effects seen in younger participants.
Vitamin D deficiency may not cause noticeable problems right away, but over time, it may quietly affect brain health and even lead to early-onset dementia.
Several large reviews of studies have found that low vitamin D levels are linked to a higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, with risk increasing as vitamin D levels drop.
People with higher vitamin D levels tend to experience a slower decline in cognitive skills such as memory, language, and visuospatial ability over time. One study found that women with higher vitamin D levels in midlife performed better on tests of executive function—skills such as planning, attention, mental flexibility, and problem-solving—10 years later. Another study found that people with higher vitamin D intake in midlife performed better on short-term memory tests more than a decade later.

What to Do About It

Mulligan was careful to note that the findings do not prove that taking vitamin D supplements in midlife will prevent dementia. “We do not yet have definitive proof,” he said, emphasizing the need for long-term clinical trials.

What is clear is that deficiency is widespread and often invisible.

An estimated 30 percent to 50 percent of the global population has inadequate vitamin D levels—and most don’t know it because deficiency rarely causes obvious symptoms. “I’ve tested vitamin D levels in every patient I’ve seen for the last 13 years, and almost no one has levels above 30 unless they’re taking supplements,” Toups said.

Safe sun exposure remains one of the most effective ways for the body to produce vitamin D. However, the ability to synthesize vitamin D through sun exposure declines with age. People who spend little time outdoors, live in northern latitudes, have darker skin, or carry excess body weight are at greater risk.

Practical Steps to Maintain Healthy Levels

A simple blood test can help determine whether your vitamin D levels are adequate. Doctors typically measure 25-hydroxyvitamin D—the main form of vitamin D in the blood—and may also check related markers such as calcium and phosphate to assess for deficiency.

Other ways to maintain healthy vitamin D levels include eating vitamin D-rich foods, such as fatty fish and fortified milk, and talking with a doctor about whether supplements may be appropriate.

Miller said the challenge is that these strategies aren’t always practical. Some people are lactose intolerant and limit dairy, while others may dislike or have limited access to fatty fish or mushrooms. Sunlight, meanwhile, may not be sufficient during late fall through early spring, and sunscreen—while important for skin protection—can also reduce the skin’s ability to produce vitamin D.

Because of these limitations, he said supplements may be worth considering—but with caution. “They should not be taken in excess, as vitamin D can be toxic,” he noted. For adults, intake should not exceed 4,000 IU per day, the established upper tolerable limit.

Low vitamin D may not cause obvious problems now, but maintaining healthy levels in midlife could make a difference for brain health years down the road.

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