Health News of Monday, 20 May 2013

Source: BBC

Vitamin D may help asthma sufferers

Vitamin D may help alleviate the symptoms of asthma in sufferers of the respiratory condition, according to the findings of a study published by the BBC.

A team at King's College London said low levels of vitamin D, which is made by the body during exposure to sunlight, was linked to worsening of the symptoms.

Its latest research shows the vitamin calms an over-active part of the immune system in asthma.

However, treating patients with vitamin D has not yet been tested.

People with asthma can find it hard to breathe when their airways become inflamed, swollen and narrowed.

Most people are treated with steroids, but the drugs do not work for all. Sunshine

"We know people with high levels of vitamin D are better able to control their asthma - that connection is quite striking," said researcher Prof Catherine Hawrylowicz.

Her group investigated the impact of the vitamin on a chemical in the body, interleukin-17. It is a vital part of the immune system and helps to fight off infections.

However, it can cause problems when levels get too high and has been strongly implicated in asthma.

In this study, published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, vitamin D was able to lower levels of interleukin-17 when it was added to blood samples taken from 28 patients.

The team is now conducting clinical trials to see if giving the sunshine vitamin to patients could ease their symptoms. They are looking at patients who do not respond to steroids as they produce seven times more interleukin-17 than other patients.

Prof Catherine Hawrylowicz told the BBC: "We think that treating people with vitamin D could make steroid-resistant patients respond to steroids or let those who can control their asthma take less steroids."

In Ghana, although asthma prevalence is low, those with asthma lack information on the condition and many attempt to treat it with over-the-counter medication which is ineffective in managing the condition.