Vitamin D is far more than just a vitamin—it's a potent steroid hormone regulating nearly 5% of our genome. Yet, remarkably, up to 70% of Americans aren't getting enough, placing them at increased risk for dementia and Alzheimer's disease. In this episode, I explore compelling new evidence from a study involving over 12,000 participants, demonstrating that vitamin D supplementation can reduce dementia risk by an impressive 40%, protecting even adults with genetic Alzheimer's risk (ApoE4 carriers).
Timestamps:
(00:00) Can vitamin D supplements reduce dementia risk?
(00:46) How common is vitamin D deficiency?
(03:31) What studies reveal about genes, vitamin D, and dementia
(05:44) Does deficiency accelerate brain aging?
(06:45) Can vitamin D supplementation enhance cognitive function?
(08:15) Dementia risk reduction insights from 12,388 adults
(09:58) Why women may benefit most
(10:49) Normal vs. impaired cognition—who benefits more from vitamin D?
(11:21) Do ApoE4 carriers get dementia protection from vitamin D?
(13:00) How mild cognitive impairment affects dementia risk
(13:41) Does the form of vitamin D matter?
(14:11) What are the optimal vitamin D blood levels?
(15:07) What dose corrects deficiency?
(15:33) How vitamin D directly supports brain function
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