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Friday

 

Dr. Alberto Ascherio, a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health and lead author, said that the sunshine vitamin can prove beneficial to early stage MS patients.

Dr. Alberto Ascherio
Dr. Alberto Ascherio, a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health and lead author, said that the sunshine vitamin can prove beneficial to early stage MS patients.
"These findings, combined with previous evidence that vitamin D deficiency is a risk factor for MS, and [research on] the immunological effects of vitamin D strongly suggest that maintaining an adequate vitamin D status is important in the treatment of MS," Ascherio said in a statement. MS is a central nervous system disease that affects muscle control and strength, vision, balance, feeling, and thinking. According to World Health
Organization, roughly 2.5 million people suffer from MS globally. For the study, the researchers observed data of 465 MS patients belonging to 18 European countries, Israel, and Canada from the BENEFIT (Betaseron in Newly Emerging Multiple Sclerosis for Initial Treatment) trial. The trial looked at the advantages of early treatment over late treatment with interferon beta-1b. The researchers recorded patients' vitamin D levels at the beginning of their symptoms and at regular intervals for over a year. They then observed its effect on the disease symptoms and progression over a period of five years. They found that early stage MS patients with sufficient levels of vitamin D had a 57 percent lower risk of new brain lesions and relapse rate. They also had a 25 percent lower yearly increase in T2 lesion size (these appear as bright spots on an MRI) than those who had insufficient amounts of vitamin D. A reduced brain volume loss was also observed in patients with required vitamin D levels.
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