Vitamin D and improved sleep in African-Americans Clinical Advisor
- “Polysomnography and actigraphy demonstrated that participants with vitamin D deficiencies had shorter sleeper duration, less REM sleep, and higher scores on the Epworth Sleepiness Scale. In African-Americans, low vitamin D levels were significantly associated with shorter average sleep duration. There was no association between vitamin D levels and sleep duration with other races and ethnicities. Why the difference between races? While the answer is unclear, it may be due to differences in metabolism, receptor activity, and activation of vitamin D.”
Reporting on 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Concentration and Sleep Duration and Continuity: Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis Sleep Journal
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- “. . . ‘African Americans, in whom adjusted sleep duration was 25.6 ± 11.7 min shorter in deficient versus sufficient individuals”
Note: this study did not appear to have other than African-Americans with dark skins.
The conclusion that Africa-Americans sleep less if they have low vitamin D
should perhaps be that Dark-Skinned individuals with low vitamin D sleep less
See also Vitamin D Life
- Sleep longer if have more vitamin D – Aug 2014
- Sleep disorders cured by 60-80 ng of vitamin D and some B vitamins – March 2013
Items in both categories Sleep and Skin-dark are listed here:
- Vitality recaptured with Vitamin D (stories of Swedish immigrant women in this case) – Dec 2019
- Sleep fragmentation 2X worse in UK senior women having dark skins – Jan 2019
- African-Americans with poor sleep have lower levels of vitamin D – Aug 2015
- Sleep disorder and nonspecific pain implies low vitamin D, especially if dark skin – March 2013