Hey Mike,
This is an interesting study but with a Ho Hum conclusion that says minor changes in observed vitamin D3 status with seasons has no effect on headache status.
IMHO, this study is no more than thinly veiled piece of opposition research focused on down-playing the capacity of vitamin D3 to act as a CH or MH preventative. You can draw your own conclusions as to who would benefit from published results like this.
Hello... the difference between being vitamin D3 deficient and vitamin D3 insufficient ( 14 to 30 ng/mL) is so minor with respect to CH or MH status, there's no way this data could be used to predict headache status. The change in vitamin D3 status must be significant to make any such assessments. By significant we're talking a physiological dose that could be expected in nature if the subjects were exposed to whole body UVB radiation from direct sunlight for at least 15 to 20 minutes a day, 5 days a week during the summer months and have a corresponding 25(OH)D response of 60 to 80 ng/mL.
We've known for years CHers and migraineurs with active bouts of headache are vitamin D3 deficient or insufficient. What the authors of this study neglected to do was investigate the relationship between headache status with a significant change in vitamin D3 status.
We've done that here at CH.com with the online survey of CHers taking the anti-inflammatory regimen with at least 10,000 IU/day vitamin D3. The following two charts illustrate a clear and unequivocal inverse relationship between vitamin D3 status and CH status.
In simple terms, if the vitamin D3 status is low (deficient/insufficient) CH status is high with an average of 3 CH/day as illustrated in the first chart. If the vitamin D3 status is high as in a physiological dose of 10,000 IU/day vitamin D3 with a corresponding 25(OH)D response near 80 ng/mL as illustrated in the second chart, the incidence of CH is low to nonexistent.
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The third chart illustrates the efficacy in responses by day from start of regimen. It also illustrates the high likelihood that serum vitamin D3 concentrations are the determining factor in favorable responses to this regimen as 25(OH)D concentrations are slow to rise as a response to vitamin D3 dose. This also points out the need for daily vitamin D3 dosing as it maintains the highest possible serum concentration.
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Had the authors of the above study taken the next obvious step to treat the vitamin D3 deficiencies with therapeutic doses of vitamin D3 (≥ 10,000 IU/day), they would have observed the same results as we have here at CH.com. At that point, they would have established and reported on a level of efficacy in treating CH and MH with vitamin D3 that Big Pharm doesn't want CHers and MHers to know about.
Take care,
V/R, Batch