r/science Feb 03 '25

Neuroscience Scientists discover that even mild COVID-19 can alter brain proteins linked to Alzheimer’s disease, potentially increasing dementia risk—raising urgent public health concerns.

https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/260553/covid-19-linked-increase-biomarkers-abnormal-brain/
15.5k Upvotes

469 comments sorted by

View all comments

2

u/StreetWiseBarbarian Feb 05 '25 edited Feb 05 '25

Scientists also discovered that vitamin d alone in large, infrequent doses can prevent many of the inflammatory impacts of most common viruses, even preventing infection outright, as well as their spread, even though calcitriol and vitamin d’s uses as effective immune system modulators are well studied, most folks still won’t educate themselves cus it counters what they think they know about how our immune systems function. So I put together a brief summary of some of the research that is available.

Here’s a comprehensive guide to understanding why having high enough (70-80nl/mg) blood levels of d vitamin can keep you from getting covid, and most other common viruses as well as helping quickly end the systemic inflammation caused by them if you’re already sick, in a short timeframe:

..This is how vitamin D interacts with the immune system; specifically, what directly influences immune activity based on the amalgamation of several clinical trials as well as a meta study on dozens of others:

The Role of Vitamin D in Immune System Modulation

Vitamin D is a critical modulator of immune function, but it does not act on the immune system in isolation. Its effects are mediated through a complex network of hormones, enzymes, and signaling molecules that directly influence immune cell behavior. While vitamin D initiates or amplifies certain immune responses, it relies on intermediaries and supporting systems to achieve the effects ascribed to it.

How Vitamin D Functions

1.  Vitamin D Synthesis and Activation:

Vitamin D is primarily obtained through sunlight exposure (via the skin) or diet and exists in an inactive form. After conversion in the liver to 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25D), it is further hydroxylated in the kidney to its active form, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (calcitriol), by the enzyme 1-alpha-hydroxylase (CYP27B1). This active form binds to the vitamin D receptor (VDR), a transcription factor present in various immune cells, including T cells, B cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells.

2.  Local and Systemic Activity:

Vitamin D acts locally in immune environments (paracrine/autocrine activity) and systemically through endocrine signaling. Immune cells like macrophages and dendritic cells produce their own calcitriol via localized 1-alpha-hydroxylase, allowing for targeted modulation of immune responses.

3.  Gene Regulation:

When calcitriol binds to VDR, the complex forms a heterodimer with the retinoid X receptor (RXR). This dimer translocates to the cell nucleus, where it binds to vitamin D response elements (VDREs) on the DNA, regulating genes involved in immune function, including those encoding for antimicrobial peptides like cathelicidin and beta-defensin 4, which enhance innate immunity.

Direct Factors Influencing the Immune System

While vitamin D plays a key role, its actions are dependent on or complemented by other factors:

1.  Cytokines as Signaling Molecules:

Cytokines like IL-10, IL-6, IL-17, and TNF-α are directly responsible for modulating immune activity. For example:

• Vitamin D promotes the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines (e.g., IL-10) and suppresses pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g., IL-17).

• Cytokines like IFN-γ and IL-1 stimulate the production of localized calcitriol in macrophages, enhancing vitamin D’s effects.


2.  Parathyroid Hormone (PTH):

PTH stimulates renal production of calcitriol, ensuring sufficient systemic levels of active vitamin D for immune and skeletal functions.

3.  Innate Immune Receptors:

Immune cells directly respond to pathogens through receptors like Toll-like receptors (TLRs), which recognize microbial components (e.g., lipopolysaccharides). TLR activation triggers a cascade of events, including the upregulation of cathelicidin and other antimicrobial peptides, which is amplified by vitamin D.

4.  Transcription Factors like NF-kB:

The transcription factor NF-kB is essential for inflammatory signaling. While vitamin D modulates NF-kB activity, NF-kB directly binds to genes involved in immune activation, driving processes like inflammation and pathogen clearance.

5.  Other Hormonal Interactions:

• Glucocorticoids: Natural anti-inflammatory hormones that complement vitamin D in suppressing excessive immune responses.
• Sex Hormones: Estrogen and testosterone influence immune tolerance and inflammation.
• Thyroid Hormones: Regulate energy production and immune cell metabolism.


6.  Antigen Presentation and Adaptive Immunity:

Vitamin D’s effects on adaptive immunity are indirect. It inhibits B cell proliferation and promotes T regulatory cells (Tregs), which maintain immune tolerance. Additionally, it shifts T cell phenotypes from inflammatory (Th1 and Th17) to anti-inflammatory (Th2), reducing autoimmune tendencies.

Protective Immunity and Infection Prevention

The articles I’ve studied emphasize vitamin D’s role in reducing infection susceptibility through its effects on protective immunity:

1.  Innate Immune Enhancement:

Vitamin D increases the production of antimicrobial peptides like cathelicidin, which disrupt bacterial cell membranes and neutralize infections. TLR signaling is amplified by vitamin D to produce these peptides efficiently.

2.  Epidemiological Evidence:

Studies show a correlation between low vitamin D levels and increased respiratory infections, including influenza and tuberculosis. For example, military recruits with higher vitamin D levels had fewer respiratory infections.

3.  Infection Modulation:

Vitamin D administration has been linked to reduced infection rates in controlled studies, such as a 42% reduction in influenza incidence in one clinical trial.

Vitamin D and Autoimmune Disease

1.  Epidemiologic Links:

Low vitamin D levels are associated with increased risk and progression of autoimmune diseases like multiple sclerosis (MS), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and type 1 diabetes (T1D).

2.  Effects on Autoimmune Processes:

• Vitamin D inhibits B cell differentiation, reducing the production of autoantibodies.
• It suppresses inflammatory T cell responses (Th1/Th17) while promoting anti-inflammatory Tregs, reducing tissue damage.

3.  Disease Progression:

Vitamin D deficiency correlates with higher disease activity and severity in lupus, MS, and RA. For example, lupus patients often exhibit severe vitamin D deficiency, which aligns with increased disease activity.

Vitamin D is not directly responsible for every immune modulation effect. Instead, it operates dynamically within a network of hormones, enzymes, and signaling molecules that collectively influence immune function. Factors like cytokines, PTH, NF-kB, TLRs, and other hormones interact with or respond to vitamin D signaling, amplifying or complementing its effects. Thus, while vitamin D is a key regulator, it relies on this broader system to achieve its protective and modulatory roles in immunity and disease prevention.

1

u/Carriage2York Feb 09 '25

Great comment! Why in alone in large, infrequent doses? Is this better than taking, for example, 2000 IU daily?

1

u/StreetWiseBarbarian Feb 09 '25

Also, it’s worth noting that since I started doing this four years ago, I have administered this dose to a group of now 25 individuals who are all pretty different people in terms of demographic and body proportion

And so far, nobody has had an adverse reaction

And for some of these people they were already sick for example, I was at an Punjabi Latino wedding and the brides party came from Canada with some Covid strain, and they confirmed this with a test and after talking to them about this, and the research that I had done and debating with several of them who are medical professionals, they decided it was worth a try and three of them who were sick, took the dose and the next day their symptoms were completely gone Those symptoms included fever, fatigue, tight throat, and nasal congestion.

This has been the case with everyone that I’ve given this dose to who is already sick

personally, I take this on an as needed basis so when I start to feel at all fatigued for no reason or at all like I’m producing extra mucus or experiencing inflammation or the beginning of inflammation in my respiratory system I’ll take a single dose of 150,000 IU and since I’ve been doing this like I said, I have not been sick over the last four years

When I first started doing this dose was before I started to heat my bodies signals that it was immunologically run down and I would actually let myself get sick and then start taking the dose and the couple times that this happened to me as soon as I started taking the dose my sickness ended within three days of that first dosage

It was that next year that I started getting my blood panel for vitamin D and saw that I had optimal levels

And it was last year that I did a pretty big dive into understanding what vitamin D does outside of what it is conventionally recommended for which is calcium absorption, and immune support but there’s actually a great deal of things that it is responsible for facilitating when it comes to suppressing autoimmune mechanisms and other inflammatory responses that the body does automatically including relieving symptoms that are related to Crohn’s disease and IBS