Taking vitamin D supplements may alleviate chronic pain in people with fibromyalgia who have low levels of the vitamin, according to a new study from Austria.
Patients with fibromyalgia syndrome suffer
from chronic, body-wide muscle and joint pain, and fatigue. Previous studies
have pointed to the possible role of vitamin D in the perception of chronic
pain.
In the new
study, researchers studied whether raising patients' vitamin D levels to the
recommended range would help with some of their symptoms. Thirty patients with
fibromyalgia who also had low levels of vitamin D in their blood (below 32
nanograms per milliliter) were randomly assigned to take either oral vitamin D supplements,
or a placebo, for 20 weeks.
Weeks after the treatment ended, patients
who took the supplements were still experiencing reduced pain, while people who
had taken placebo didn't see a change in their pain level, according to the
study, published today (Jan. 17) in the journal Pain.
"Vitamin D supplementation may be
regarded as a relatively safe and economical treatment" for people with
fibromyalgia," said study researcher Dr. Florian Wepner, an orthopedist at
the Orthopaedic Hospital Speising in Vienna.
However, the vitamin is not a cure for
the condition, Wepner said. Fibromyalgia "cannot be explained by a vitamin
D deficiency alone," he said. And although the patients who took vitamin D
saw reductions in their pain, there were no significant changes in their
depression or anxiety symptoms.
Fibromyalgia affects about 2 percent of the
U.S. population, and is more common in women than in men, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. No treatments are available that
address all symptoms of the condition, but some symptoms may be alleviated by
physical therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy and temporary drug therapy.
Vitamin D is
present in very few foods, but is produced by the skin after exposure to
ultraviolet rays from sunlight. It can be found in fortified foods, such as
milk, orange juice and cereals as well. Too much vitamin D has its risks, too —
it can cause damage to the heart and kidneys.
Low levels of vitamin D are especially
common in patients with severe pain and fibromyalgia, the researchers said.
"Vitamin D levels should be monitored
regularly in fibromyalgia patients, especially in the winter season, and raised
appropriately," Wepner said.
0 Blogger-Facebbok:
Post a Comment