Vitamin D deficiency
and Vitamin A excess
Linked to Autism
LINKS TO RECENT ARTICLES WITH SCIENTIFIC RATIONAL
Scientific American Article
Psychology Today Article
Life Extension Foundation Article
Vitamin D Council Link
*********************************
The Vitamin D Newsletter
June 2008
This is a periodic newsletter from the Vitamin D Council, a 501(3)(c) non-profit
organization trying to end the epidemic of vitamin D deficiency. If you don't
want to get the newsletter, please go to the
website and remove your email
address. This newsletter is not copyrighted, please reproduce it and post it on
Internet sites. I will post this newsletter in the
newsletter
archives.
This month we feature a remarkable series of letters from a mother of an
autistic son who treated her child with vitamin D. It is the first case report
in the medical literature suggesting vitamin D has a treatment effect in autism.
First, a brief case report and then a more detailed exchange of emails between
the mother and me.
**************************************
Case Report:
John is a seven-year old boy living in the northeastern U.S. with a
long-standing diagnosis of autism. Symptoms include temper tantrums, repetitive
self-stimulatory behavior, impaired language, mood swings, fear of being alone,
toileting problems, dysbacteriosis, and impaired muscle strength. John spends a
lot of time outdoors starting in the spring and his mother noticed a distinct
seasonal variation in his symptoms in that he improved in the summer and
regressed in the winter. A 25-hydroxy-vitamin D in April of 2008 was 25 ng/ml
and obtained after John had begun to play outside. Due to the seasonality of
John's symptoms the mother consulted me and I advised the mother to stop all
products containing vitamin A including cod liver oil and begin John on 5,000 IU
of vitamin D3 per day for two weeks followed by 2,000 IU per day in the form of
powdered vitamin D dissolved in juice. Within a week of starting the vitamin D
language began to return and he was no longer as fearful of being alone. At the
end of two weeks his language showed further improvement, he began to toilet
himself, counted to 10 and knew the spelling of his name. After three weeks
language continued to improve and some improvements were noted in his dysbiosis.
After four weeks of vitamin D treatment, the mother noted improvements in muscle
strength as well as continued improvements in language. A repeat
25-hydroxy-vitamin D is pending while John continues taking 2,000 IU of vitamin
D per day.
Before you read the series of emails between the mother and me, I'd like to
caution that this is only a case report of sorts and does not prove a treatment
effect. Spontaneous remissions, while rare in autism, have been reported, thus
the supplemental vitamin D may have had nothing to do with his improvement. If
the response is due to vitamin D, there is no assurance it will prove lasting. I
think it unlikely that older autistic children or individuals with severe autism
will show these sorts of apparent improvements. Furthermore, autism is a
multifactorial disease with strong genetic roots and it is highly unlikely that
treatment of vitamin D deficiency in all autistic children will result in
similar improvements. Finally, I did not examine this child, and I am relying on
the child's mother to report both his condition and his apparent response to
vitamin D treatment. However, the mother agreed to speak with the press about
her son and allow for independent confirmation of the apparent treatment
response.
Below are the emails, edited for brevity, clarity, and confidentiality.
Dear Dr. Cannell:
I am writing because I believe my son John is strongly affected by vitamin D and
I need some advice. John is seven and autistic and weighs 50 pounds. We live in
the northeastern part of the United States. He starts spending lots of time
outside in May and continues until September. Every year, like clockwork, he has
the same patterns of behavior and ability. After about six weeks of sun
exposure, every July, he begins feeling much better, seems to be comfortable in
his skin, does not have as much self-stimulatory behavior, can eat a variety of
foods and has language. This past summer, he was using 14-word sentences. By the
end of November, he can't even ask you for a cup of juice. He becomes more
exclusive, has emotional highs and lows, has tantrums and is easily frustrated.
His 25(OH)D level on April 15th was 25 ng/ml but he had already been going out
in the sun so his level must have been lower in the winter. I have had his
genetics tested (Nutrigenomic) and he has mutations in his vitamin D receptors:
My first question, does it sound like the changes in his behaviors and abilities
could be caused by lack of vitamin D? Could you elaborate on the time it would
take to get adequate amounts of vitamin D to start seeing positive results? For
example, even if he starts going out in the sun in May, it's usually not until
July that I see positive changes. Then would it take a month or two to go back
to being deficient, thus explaining his 'regression' by the time November comes
around. Secondly, I am looking at different forms of vitamin D therapy: a
vitamin D lamp, vitamin D3 cream, or oral vitamin D. Can you tell me what might
be the best form during the winter months?
Thank you very much for your time and attention.
Jane, Boston MA
**************************************
Dear Jane:
Yes, it is possible your son's autism is related to vitamin D. Such seasonality
has been reported before in autism, both in an individual and in autistic
children at a summer camp. Although suggestive, such seasonality does not prove
a vitamin D connection. Sun exposure, unless it is full body, takes several
months to get vitamin D levels up and if sunblock or excessive clothes are worn
sun exposure will not get 25(OH)D levels much above 30 ng/ml. As far as the
"mutations" you list, they are actually vitamin D receptor (VDR) polymorphisms
and not referred to as mutations although all such changes occurred through
mutations at some time in the past. VDR polymorphisms are simply the different
structures of the vitamin D receptor that different people have and they are
widely distributed. A pilot study of actual VDR receptor mutations did not
detect mutational VDR mutations in 24 autistic individuals but they did not
assess for VDR polymorphisms. However, a highly significant association exists
between one VDR polymorphism and larger head size. Mean head circumference is
larger in autism.
Yan J,
et al. Vitamin D receptor variants in 192 patients with schizophrenia and other
psychiatric diseases. Neurosci Lett 2005;380(1-2):37-41.
Handoko
HY, et al. Polymorphisms in the vitamin D receptor and their associations with
risk of schizophrenia and selected anthropometric measures. Am J Hum Biol
2006;18(3):415-7.
Lainhart
JE, et al. Head circumference and height in autism: a study by the Collaborative
Program of Excellence in Autism. Am J Med Genet A 2006;140(21):2257-74.
Lainhart
JE, et al. Macrocephaly in children and adults with autism. J Am Acad Child
Adolesc Psychiatry 1997;36(2):282-90.
I emailed the world's foremost expert on DR polymorphisms asking him about your
son's polymorphisms and his reply, quite technical, is below.
**************************************
Dear John:
I apologize for the delay in getting back to you regarding VDR polymorphisms.
Initial studies by Eisman and coworkers many years ago suggested that several of
the polymorphs identified above in the VDR gene (Bsm/Tag) correlated strongly
with osteoporosis. Despite the hoopla, subsequent analyses by many different
investigators did not really confirm these results, i.e. only a very modest (3%)
correlation. This spawned multiple studies searching for correlations between
VDR polymorph's and cancer, autoimmune disease and so forth. It is fair to say
from all of these studies that the correlation is at best weak, and in most
cases non-existent. Part of this may be due to the fact that the Bsm and Taq
polymorphs are located in VDR gene introns and as a first approximation cannot
affect the VDR protein's function. This is not an absolute statement, however,
as our work is now showing that regulatory regions that control the VDR's
expression are located within introns as well as upstream. Therefore the
possibility exists that these polymorphs could affect expression, although we
have not found these regions to contain enhancers yet. This is clearly where
gene and disease studies are going. The only polymorph that could affect
function is the Fok1 site, which we identified many years ago following our
initial cloning and structural analysis of the human VDR gene. The presence of
this site leads to the expression of a shorter VDR protein (424 aa) that is
purported to have a slight increase in transcriptional activity (10%?) vs the
large protein (427 aa). The above analysis suggests that this polymorph is
absent, leading to production of the larger perhaps less active protein. On a
single patient basis, it is really difficult to conclude anything regarding this
finding. Indeed, despite large numbers of patients, the VDR polymorph have not
really revealed any significant insight. Given the summer correlations, it is
probably more likely that the individual is low in vitamin D3 in winter.
Sincerely,
Professor John Doe
**************************************
Thus, one of your son's polymorphisms may have less functionality but that
should be easily overcome by higher vitamin D levels. The first thing to do is
stop all vitamin A, multivitamins containing vitamin A, or cod liver oil and
start vitamin D. As you will see below, vitamin A antagonizes the action of
vitamin D and he should have plenty of vitamin A if he eats colorful vegetables,
colorful fruit, eggs and fortified oatmeal. As far as vitamin D, I think the
easiest way to give vitamin D is powdered capsules, not a cream. You can open
the capsule and put the powder in about anything, such as juice. To buy the
capsules, go to "Bio Tech Pharmacal" and buy both a bottle of the 5,000 and the
1,000 IU capsules. He should take one 5,000 IU capsule a day for two weeks then
take 2,000 IU per day. After a month, go to the doctor and have another
25-hydroxy-vitamin D blood test. Do not let your doctor order a
1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D as it will give you and your doctor false information
about your son's vitamin D status. The other option is buying a Sperti vitamin D
light. Daily use of the light on both sides of his trunk will raise levels
fairly quickly but you should still have a 25(OH)D blood test every month to
assure his levels rise to the mid level of normal ranges, about 70 ng/ml.
Vitamin D is very safe. Your son would have to take more than 10,000 IU a day
for more than a year to have any risk of toxicity. If he improves and his level
is 50 ng/ml, the next question is would he improve even more if his level was 70
ng/ml? Some lifeguards have levels of 80-100 ng/ml; normal ranges in the labs in
the USA are 30 -100 ng/ml (ideal ranges are 50 -100 ng/ml.) If you have any more
questions, let me know. I certainly want to know how he is doing.
Sincerely,
John Cannell
**************************************
Dear Dr. Cannell:
It has been one week on 5000 IUs of vitamin D3 daily and already we're getting
some language back! We haven't had original language since probably around the
end of November. The only language we have had in the past five months has been
verbal scripting. Today John has already told me "turn off the TV" and "clean up
the water". This is all very exciting. Will it last? I will continue to keep you
updated on progress and change in behavior. One more thing, all winter long he
was afraid to be by himself anywhere. Now he is starting to be able to be in
another room or outside by himself.
Thanks so much,
Jane
**************************************
Dear Jane:
I can't tell you how happy I am for you. I suspect John will continue to
improve. Do you have any parent rating scales or does his treating pediatrician
have any objective rating scales? If you have before and after rating scales or
his treating doctor does then it becomes important to track his progress on an
objective measure. Jane, if you are a member of any autism discussion groups,
you should post about this, including doses used. If your son's case is typical,
then hundreds of thousands of autistic children may be helped with vitamin D.
John Cannell
**************************************
Dear Dr. Cannell:
It has been two weeks on 5,000 IU per day and I want to inform you that we are
having continued success with language. Continued in the sense that it is
consistent, it wasn't just a one day fluke. In addition, he is taking himself to
the bathroom; this is another thing that goes away in winter months. I usually
have to catch him holding it in and then suggest he go, but now he is going
completely by himself. In therapy last week, he started drawing again. He drew a
bee and then ran around the room buzzing. His toileting is consistent with his
therapists, not just mommy. Last night, I asked him to count to 10 for me and he
did - quite enthusiastically. Then I said what does J-O-H-N spell? It took him a
bit but then he said "John."
Unfortunately, the last scale taken was when he was 3 when he had his first
developmental evaluation. But we do track behavior and language on a weekly
basis. The forms we fill out give a good indication as to how he is doing.
I belong to a parent forum. It was created by a doctor named Amy Yasko. She's a
PhD, a researcher, not a medical doctor. It was through her that I got John's
genetics tested. She advocates vitamin D as being very crucial. I will post
something on her forum for the parents there. However, if the parents on the
forum are following her recommendations, they should be taking it already - 2000
IUs in winter and 1000 IUs in summer is her recommendation. I will post
something on the forum to really emphasize how important vitamin D is.
Jane
**************************************
Dear Jane:
I'm glad the improvements are continuing. I see Dr. Yasko recommends 10,000 IU
of vitamin A/day as well as cod liver oil. I strongly disagree. Make sure your
son is taking neither vitamin A nor cod liver oil. Rather, make sure he eats
colored fruits and vegetables as well as fortified oatmeal. Vitamin A interferes
with vitamin D's function, especially at the doses Dr. Yasko recommends.
Vitamin A antagonizes the action of vitamin D. In humans, even the vitamin A in
a single serving of liver impairs vitamin D’s rapid intestinal calcium response.
Furthermore, the consumption of preformed retinols, even in amounts consumed by
many Americans in both multivitamins and cod liver oil appears to be causing
low-grade, but widespread, bone toxicity, perhaps through its antagonism of
vitamin D. In a recent dietary intake study, Kyungwon et al found high retinol
intake completely thwarted vitamin D’s otherwise protective effect on distal
colorectal adenoma and they found a clear relationship between vitamin D and
vitamin A intakes as the women in the highest quintile of vitamin D intake also
ingested almost 10,000 IU of retinols/day. As early as 1933, Hess et al warned
about vitamin A consumption, concluding, “as to a requirement of thousands of
units of vitamin A daily, the unquestionable answer is that this constitutes
therapeutic absurdity, which, happily, will prove to be only a passing fad.”
Rohde CM, Deluca HF. All-trans retinoic acid antagonizes the action of
calciferol and its active metabolite, 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol, in rats. J
Nutr. 2005;135(7):1647-1652.
Johansson S, Melhus H. Vitamin A antagonizes calcium response to vitamin D in
man. J Bone Miner Res. 2001;16(10):1899-1905.
Penniston KL, Tanumihardjo SA. The acute and chronic toxic effects of vitamin A.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2006;83(2):191-201.
Oh K, Willett WC, Wu K, Fuchs CS, Giovannucci EL. Calcium and vitamin D intakes
in relation to risk of distal colorectal adenoma in women. Am J Epidemiol.
2007;165(10):1178-1186.
Hess AF, Lewis JM, Barenberg LH. Does our dietary require vitamin A supplement?
JAMA. 1933;101:657-663.
Unfortunately, Hess’s prophecy of a passing fad proved premature and many
Americans continue to consume “absurd” and dangerous quantities of vitamin A.
For example, multivitamins, until recently, had small amounts of vitamin D (200
to 400 IU) but high amounts of preformed retinols (5,000 to 10,000 IU). This
pales in comparison to a tablespoon of modern cod liver oil, which contains
sub-physiological amounts of vitamin D (400 to 1200 IU) but supra-physiological
amounts of completely preformed retinols (5,000 to 15,000 IU or in some cases
30,000 IU).
John Cannell
**************************************
Dear Dr. Cannell:
It has been three weeks and he went from 5,000 IU of vitamin D per day to 2,000
IU per day a week ago. His language is increasing. He's now back to saying the
things he wants with some prompting. He also has gut dysbiosis and I'm sure the
D is helping with microbes in his gut. He has a lot of problems with his immune
system and bacteria and viruses. Also, doesn't vitamin D aid in the production
of glutathione? I feel that could be a big part of his increased language.
Jane
**************************************
Dear Jane:
Yes, abnormal immune responses are associated with both autism and vitamin D
deficiency. For example, autistic individuals have immune abnormalities that
show a striking similarity to the immune functions affected by vitamin D. Animal
evidence indicates some vitamin D deficiency induced brain damage may be
malleable, that is, vitamin D may partially reverse the brain damage, if given
early enough. These studies offer hope that sunlight or oral vitamin D,
especially in young autistic children, may have a treatment effect.
Ashwood P, et al. The immune response in autism: a new frontier for autism
research. J Leukoc Biol 2006;80(1):1-15.
Cantorna MT, et al. Vitamin D status, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, and the immune
system. Am J Clin Nutr 2004;80(6 Suppl):1717S-20S.
Burne TH, et al. Combined prenatal and chronic postnatal vitamin D deficiency in
rats impairs prepulse inhibition of acoustic startle. Physiol Behav
2004;81(4):651-5.
Both the brain and the blood of autistic individuals show evidence of ongoing
chronic inflammation and oxidative stress. That is, the disease process is
probably increasingly destructive. Further hope for a treatment effect rests in
activated vitamin D's powerful anti-inflammatory properties. Its administration
reduces production of inflammatory cytokines in the brain, which have
consistently been associated with cognitive impairment. Furthermore, activated
vitamin D is remarkably neuroprotective by stimulating neurotropin release,
reducing toxic cellular calcium levels in the brain, inhibiting the production
of nitrous oxide, and by its immunomodulating properties, especially in reducing
inflammatory cytokines and by increasing brain glutathione.
Moore ME, Piazza A, McCartney Y, Lynch MA. Evidence that vitamin D3 reverses
age-related inflammatory changes in the rat hippocampus. Biochem Soc Trans
2005;33(Pt 4):573-7.
Cohen-Lahav M, Shany S, Tobvin D, Chaimovitz C, Douvdevani A. Vitamin D
decreases NFkappaB activity by increasing IkappaBalpha levels. Nephrol Dial
Transplant 2006;21(4):889-97
Kalueff AV, Eremin KO, Tuohimaa P. Mechanisms of neuroprotective action of
vitamin d(3). Biochemistry (Mosc) 2004;69(7):738-41.
This last function of vitamin D, increasing cellular levels of glutathione, may
explain the purported link between heavy metals, oxidative stress, and autism.
For example, activated vitamin D reduces iron-induced and zinc-induced oxidative
injuries in rat brain. The primary route for the neurotoxicity of most heavy
metals is through depletion of glutathione and subsequent generation of reactive
oxygen and nitrogen species. Besides its function as a master antioxidant,
glutathione acts as a chelating (binding) agent to remove heavy metals. Several
studies indicate autistic individuals have difficulty excreting heavy metals,
especially mercury. If vitamin D deficient brains are unable to utilize
glutathione properly, and thus unable to remove heavy metals, they may be
oxidatively damaged by heavy metal loads normal children easily excrete. The
amount of activated vitamin D in the brain directly depends on how much vitamin
D is made in the skin or put in the mouth.
Garcion E, Wion-Barbot N, Montero-Menei CN, Berger F, Wion D. New clues about
vitamin D functions in the nervous system. Trends Endocrinol Metab
2002;13(3):100-5.
Chen KB, Lin AM, Chiu TH. Systemic vitamin D3 attenuated oxidative injuries in
the locus coeruleus of rat brain. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2003;993:313-24.
Lin AM, Chen KB, Chao PL. Antioxidative effect of vitamin D3 on zinc-induced
oxidative stress in CNS. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2005;1053:319-29.
Valko M, Morris H, Cronin MT. Metals, toxicity and oxidative stress. Curr Med
Chem 2005;12(10):1161-208
Kern JK, Jones AM. Evidence of toxicity, oxidative stress, and neuronal insult
in autism. J Toxicol Environ Health B Crit Rev 2006;9(6):485-99.
Sincerely,
John Cannell
**************************************
Dear Dr. Cannell:
It has been a month now and John's Improvements are continuing. In the last
week, he has been using his muscles more, he goes on the swing outside and lifts
his legs and bends in ways that take core muscle strength. This is yet another
skill or interest that left and is returning. I will report more next week.
Jane
**************************************
Conclusion:
It is too early to say vitamin D has a treatment effect in autism. However, a
simple risk/benefit analysis suggests that autistic children should be diagnosed
and aggressively treated for vitamin D deficiency. If readers want to learn more
about vitamin D and autism, they can obtain the entire paper on the link below.
Unfortunately, Elsevier charges $31.50 to download it. You can read a similar
document for free on the website, where we first published the theory a year
ago.
Cannell JJ. Autism and vitamin D. Med Hypotheses. 2008;70(4):750-9.
http://vitamindcouncil.org/newsletter/2007-may.shtml
In summation, autistic children should be given enough vitamin D to get their
25(OH)D levels up to the mid to high range of normals, that is, 70 ng/ml (175
nmol/L in countries that use the metric system). In the absence of sun exposure,
this usually requires long-term administration of about 1,000 IU/day per 20
pounds of body weight with a loading dose of 2,000 IU of vitamin D/day for every
20 pounds of body weight for the first two weeks. As individual variation in
response is very high, they should have 25(OH)D blood tests every month until
their level has stabilized around 70 ng/ml. They should stop all products
containing preformed retinols (vitamin A), especially cod liver oil.
John Cannell, MD
The Vitamin D Council
This is a periodic newsletter from the Vitamin D Council, a non-profit trying to
end the epidemic of vitamin D deficiency. If you don't want to get the
newsletter, please hit reply and let us know. As we are a 501(3)(c) non-profit
corporation, dedicated to ending vitamin D deficiency and not making money, the
Vitamin D Council does not copyright this newsletter. Please reproduce it and
post it on Internet sites. If this newsletter proves useful to a child you know
with autism, the Vitamin D Council asks for a donation as we have not been able
to secure a grant and our bank account balance is again below $5,000. Send your
tax-deductible contributions to:
The Vitamin D Council
9100 San Gregorio Road
Atascadero, CA 93422