December 2, 2003 Journal BMC
Psychiatry.
People suffering from major depression seem to respond better to
antidepressants and therapy if they have higher levels of vitamin B-12
in their blood, suggesting that supplements or a diet high in B-12
might help successfully battle depression.In the past, researchers
have linked low levels of the vitamin with a poor response to
treatment for depression. But in a new study, researchers from Kuopio
University Hospital in Kuopio, Finland, found a link between normal to
high levels of B-12 and treatment success. The authors measured blood
levels of vitamin B-12 in 115 depressed outpatients as they began
treatment and again six months later. Those patients who responded to
treatment had higher levels of the vitamin at the beginning and end of
the study than those whose treatment didn't work.
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