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Vitamin D and Dementia: Why Low Levels May Worsen Confusion

If you’re exhausted watching a loved one struggle with confusion, mood swings, restlessness, or poor sleep, low vitamin D could be quietly making the nervous system strain worse.

As a dementia caregiver, self-doubt (“Am I missing something?”) can build stress when symptoms like withdrawal, unsteadiness, or smaller appetites appear despite your best efforts. Low vitamin D is common in older adults and can overlap with dementia changes—not because of caregiver mistakes, but due to predictable age-related biology.

Vitamin D supports brain function by helping neurotransmitters (serotonin, dopamine), controlling inflammation, regulating melatonin for sleep, and supporting neuron stability and coordination. Deficiency can make dementia symptoms feel more intense—restlessness, falls, emotional volatility—without it being purely disease progression.

After age 70, vitamin D production drops due to skin, liver, kidney, and gut changes, and indoor living often limits natural sources. Daily D3 supplementation (800–2000 IU) can help maintain optimal levels (40–60 ng/mL), outperforming D2. Blood testing guides safe, doctor-monitored support.

Key Takeaways:

Why This Matters:
Caregiving through confusion brings burnout, grief, and constant stress. Understanding vitamin D as a biological factor—not a personal failure—reduces guilt and supports steadier moments, safer routines, better rest, and preserved connection.

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