Vitamin D Lifts Mood During Cold Weather Months

Posted by on Mar 8, 2010 | 8 Comments

There should be an image here!A daily dose of vitamin D may just be what Chicagoans need to get through the long winter, according to researchers at Loyola University Chicago Marcella Niehoff School of Nursing (MNSON). This nutrient lifts mood during cold weather months when days are short and more time is spent indoors.

“Vitamin D deficiency continues to be a problem despite the nutrient’s widely reported health benefits,” said Sue Penckofer, PhD, RN, professor, MNSON. “Chicago winters compound this issue when more people spend time away from sunlight, which is a natural source of vitamin D.”

Diet alone may not be sufficient to manage vitamin D levels. A combination of adequate dietary intake of vitamin D, exposure to sunlight, and treatment with vitamin D2 or D3 supplements can decrease the risk of certain health concerns. The preferred range in the body is 30 – 60 ng/mL of 25(OH) vitamin D.

Loyola faculty members plan to take vitamin D research a step further by evaluating whether weekly vitamin D supplements improve blood sugar control and mood in women with diabetes. Depression is associated with increased insulin resistance, so people with diabetes have a greater risk for the disease than those without depression. Women also tend to have greater rates of depression and poorer blood sugar control than men with diabetes.

“There is evidence to suggest that vitamin D supplementation may decrease insulin resistance,” said Dr. Penckofer. “If we can stabilize insulin levels, we may be able to simply and cost effectively improve blood sugar control and reduce symptoms of depression for these women.”

Loyola is currently enrolling women in this clinical trial. In order to enter the study, they must be 18 to 70 years of age, have stable type 2 diabetes, signs of depression and no other major medical illness. Eighty women with type 2 diabetes and signs of depression will be given a weekly dose of vitamin D (50,000 IU) for a period of six months. Study participants will be evaluated at three points during this time.

“Vitamin D has widespread benefits for our health and certain chronic diseases in particular,” Dr. Penckofer said. “Our research may shed greater light on the role this nutrient plays in managing two conditions that impact millions of Americans. If proven to be successful, vitamin D may an important addition to care for diabetes and depression.”

Nora Plunkett @ Loyola University Health System

[Photo above by Jo Ann Deasy / CC BY-ND 2.0]

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  • Anonymous

    My laptop, my desktop and both of my kids desktops are all running Linux Mint 10. The only time I boot into W7 is on my laptop to access a special program from my work. So many people use their PC for email, web browsing and little else. Mint will enable those “old” Pentium 4s to do those things and much more. And it’s actually easier to install and keep updated than Windows 7!

  • http://www.facebook.com/Porkyxi Tim Moore

    i have 2 desktops running xp..both run Photoshop and Corel Painter fine..one even with a tv tuner card..i put a new vid card and power supply in and things run fine..i dont see anything in Vista or 7 that i “need”..i can do all i want with xp..until the motherboard dies…and they have been running continuously for 4-5 years…only when i cannot fix them will i upgrade..

  • Anonymous

    XP or the NSA backdoor in Vista and 7, seems like a no brainer.

  • http://twitter.com/jordanarseno Jordan Arseno

    I grew up on XP; it’s certainly the OS that I am most accustomed to and the most productive on. With that said… I’ve recently moved to Ubuntu – Open Source FTW!

  • Carol Fletez

    I love my laptop with win 7 pro where I can run Virtual PC and run XP when I need to; I can also run LINUX there. I have two older PCs one of which is a LINUX server and the other which is
    a mint machine like that mentioned below. You can still use your older machines as servers to store data, network into a home network and still get ‘life’ from them. Although it is possible to store a lot of info ‘in the cloud’ which Google docs are, I am a security nut that wants to have my stuff secure with me!

  • http://twitter.com/wtreece Will Treece

    My new PC is fairly new but my second machine (a Linux box at the moment) is 3 years old and has fairly old hardware, however after a few tweaks and upgrades runs plenty fast enough and now with a good graphics card it can handle all the graphics I want it to, therefore what would be the point in replacing it, if it ain’t broke don’t fix it really. Whatever works for the user in question. I had a Pentium 4 PC that lasted me a good 7 years and still to this day functions fine for basic use. There is too much emphasis on replacing not on the simple stuff, an extra stick of RAM or a new GPU can extend a PC’s life by a year or more.

  • Anonymous

    I chose my hardware so well my pc lasted 6 years, I only changed the case a couple of times because I kept finding finding cooler ones with shiny lights.
    I had ati x900 all-in-one, 2gb of ram, amd 3200xp cpu, Abit NF7 mobo and the hdd I kept replacing but only ‘cuz I kept running out of space.
    On the OS side, I played with every single flavor of XP, Vista & 7 I could get my hands on, even dual & triple booted with every flavor of linux I could find.
    Long story short, till death do us part, if it can run any OS no matter how old then there is no reason to dump them.