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Vitamin D Supplementation Improves Mood in Women with Type 2 Diabetes.

Citation
Penckofer, S., et al. “Vitamin D Supplementation Improves Mood In Women With Type 2 Diabetes.”. Journal Of Diabetes Research, p. 8232863.
Center University of Chicago
Author Sue Penckofer, Mary Byrn, William Adams, Mary Ann Emanuele, Patricia Mumby, Joanne Kouba, Diane E Wallis
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine the effect of vitamin D supplementation on improving mood (depression and anxiety) and health status (mental and physical) in women with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).

METHODS: Fifty women with T2DM and significant depressive symptomology were enrolled into the "Sunshine Study," where weekly vitamin D supplementation (ergocalciferol, 50,000 IU) was given to all participants for six months. The main outcomes included (1) depression (Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression, CES-D, and Patient Health Questionnaire, PHQ-9), (2) anxiety (State-Trait Anxiety), and (3) health status (Short Form, SF-12).

RESULTS: Forty-six women (92%) completed all visits. There was a significant decrease in depression (CES-D and PHQ-9, < 0.001) and anxiety (state and trait, < 0.001). An improvement in mental health status (SF-12, < 0.001) was also found. After controlling for covariates (race, season of enrollment, baseline vitamin D, baseline depression (PHQ-9), and body mass index), the decline in depression remained significant (CES-D, < 0.001). There was a trend for a better response to supplementation for women who were not taking medications for mood (antidepressants or anxiolytics) ( = 0.07).

CONCLUSIONS: Randomized trials to confirm that vitamin D supplementation can improve mood and health status in T2DM women are needed.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Journal of diabetes research
Volume
2017
Number of Pages
8232863
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
2314-6753
DOI
10.1155/2017/8232863
Alternate Journal
J Diabetes Res
PMID
29082262
PMCID
PMC5610883
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