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Low Vitamin D Levels Strongly Linked to Depression A large new review finds that adults with lower vitamin D levels are more likely to have depression, especially when 25-hydroxy-vitamin D [25(OH)D] falls at or below 30 nmol/L. The work, published in Biomolecules and Biomedicine, also makes clear that this pattern does not yet prove that low vitamin D causes depression. Depression affects about 5% of adults worldwide and is expected to become the leading cause of disease burden by 2030. Standard antidepressants help many people but, on average, provide only “small to moderate” effects, which has kept interest high in safe, modifiable factors like vitamin D. From a biological perspective, the connection makes sense. Vitamin D receptors are abundant in mood-relevant brain regions, including the hypothalamus and pons. Its active form, 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D, supports healthy brain signaling, calms neuro-inflammation, limits oxidative stress, and helps keep intracellular calcium in balance, all pathways that have long been tied to depression. Source:SciTechDaily @EverythingScience