Schizophrenia and Vitamin D
The key finding is that the risk of schziophrenia has a U-shaped curve with neonatal serum concentration, which is illustrated in figure 2 of the article.The findings were statistically significant with a maximum relative risk of 2.1 for having very low vitamin D status compared to the optimum level.
One figure that's sadly lacking from the publication is a histogram of the entire population for vitamin D serum concentration. Since Figure 2 is only given in percentiles, we cannot evaluate what the actual optimal vitamin D concentration is, nor what is too high. I think this is a major oversight in this article.
The potential links between the general family of autism, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder and vitamin D deficiency have been hypothesized before, such as in this article from the Vitamin D council. Obviously, with a relative risk of 2.0 vitamin D isn't the whole story here, but it likely plays a role in the regulation of brain development. The question is how? Is it a precursor hormone to a development hormone? McGrath referenced an earilier article (on which he was also an author), Eyles et al. (2005) which suggests that vitamin D plays a direct role as a paracrine hormone in the mammalian brain.
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