It appears that one or both of the following are true
- Cortisol "Vitamin D Receptor" (38,300 Google search results June 2018)
- Cortisol uses Cholesterol needed to produce Vitamin D from the sun
Many diseases stress the body ==> consume vitamin D
No indication that mental stress is reduced by Vitamin D (other than Depression )
See Vitamin D Life
More stress (allostatic load biomarkers) associated with vitamin D deficiency – Oct 2015
"Allostatic load is a powerful tool to assess the harmful effects of chronic stress to the human body on a multisystem level. "
Comment by Vitamin D Life: Seems more likely that high allostatic load index ==> low vitamin D
Increased vitamin D "might" prevent stress and "might" reduce stress,
BUT restoring vitamin D levels should most certainly reduce other health problems assocaiaed with low vitamin D
Mental stress significantly lowered the vitamin D levels of Heart patients – Sept 2014
People with stable CAD were told to prepare a 2 minute speech in 3 minutes
Their Vitamin D levels dropped from 31 ng to 24 ng
Many diseases reduce levels of vitamin D diseases stress the body
96 percent vitamin D deficient – destitute asylum seekers and refugees in London – Nov 2012
Vitamin D associated with 2X better health and less stress, both before and after Breast Cancer – Dec 2014
Overview Pain and Vitamin D
Vitamin D is number one stress buster – Huffington Post May 2010
Stress buster #2 is Magnesium
Smoking reduces vitamin D
Wonder if stress ==> smoking ==> lower level of vitamin D
Cholesterol is needed to produce both Vitamin D and Cortisol
Elderly Korean women 2.7 times more likely to feel stressed if low vitamin D – Oct 2016
See also web
- Are stress and high cortisol depleting your vitamin D?
Sept 2012 Natural News: Cortisol is a glucocorticoid hormone, all of which diminish Vitamin D Receptors - Stress and vitamin D in chronically stressed rats Oct 2013
CYP27B1. CYP24A1 , and Vitamin D receptor were all affected by stress - How Stress Makes You Sick
Mercola Dec 2015 - no mention of Vitamin D
Note: this page ignores other stresses - associated with low vitamin D
- stress fractures
- oxidative stress
- stress incontinence
82843 visitors, last modified 27 Jun, 2018, |