Study Links Low Vitamin D Levels to Higher Tau Protein in Brains of Adults
A study from the University of Galway examined vitamin D levels and tau protein accumulation in 793 dementia-free adults. Published on April 1 in Neurology Open Access, it found associations between low vitamin D and increased tau after 16 years. The observational research highlights potential links but cannot prove causation.
GB NewsStudy Findings on Vitamin D and Brain Proteins A study led by researchers at the University of Galway investigated the relationship between vitamin D levels and tau protein accumulation in the brains of adults.
The research tracked 793 participants who were free from dementia at the start, with an average age of 39 years when their blood vitamin D concentrations were first assessed. Approximately 16 years later, participants underwent PET brain imaging to evaluate levels of tau and amyloid beta proteins.
Researchers classified vitamin D readings above 30 nanograms per millilitre as high and those below 30 nanograms per millilitre as low.
Of the participants, 34 per cent fell into the low vitamin D category, while five per cent reported taking vitamin D supplements. The study appeared in Neurology Open Access on 1 April.
Participant Demographics and Methodology The participants in the study were predominantly white.
Vitamin D was measured only once rather than monitored over time. The study was observational in nature and cannot establish a direct causal relationship between vitamin D and reduced tau accumulation. Dr Martin Mulligan is the lead author of the study, as reported by GB News.
The research focused on adults without initial dementia to observe long-term brain protein changes.
Lead Author's Statements Dr Martin Mulligan stated, "Previous research has suggested that Vitamin D may work by reducing inflammation, or by improving antioxidant defences and cell signalling, which may keep the tau protein from accumulating.
" GB News reported on the study's implications for brain health, emphasizing the observational design and limitations.
Story Timeline
3 events- 2026-04-01
Study published in Neurology Open Access.
1 sourceUniversity of Galway - Approximately 16 years after initial assessment
Participants underwent PET brain imaging to evaluate tau and amyloid beta proteins.
1 sourceUniversity of Galway - Initial assessment (average age 39)
Blood vitamin D concentrations assessed in 793 dementia-free adults.
1 sourceUniversity of Galway
Potential Impact
- 01
Highlights need for clinical trials before supplement recommendations.
- 02
May prompt further research into vitamin D's role in brain health.
- 03
Limited generalizability due to predominantly white participants.
- 04
Could influence public awareness of vitamin D testing in midlife adults.
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