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Vitamin D in Multiple Sclerosis-Lessons From Animal Studies

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FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.757795

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multiple sclerosis; vitamin D; animal models-rodent; autoimmune diseases; therapy

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Multiple sclerosis is a multifactorial disease of the central nervous system with unclear disease mechanisms, and studies suggest that vitamin D may be a potential treatment approach. Animal models are essential for researching disease mechanisms and developing drugs for multiple sclerosis. When clinical studies present conflicting findings, standardized settings and mechanistic background information are necessary for further research.
Multiple sclerosis is a multifactorial disease of the central nervous system with both genetic and environmental causes. The exact disease mechanisms are still unclear. Consequently, studies of possible treatment and preventive measures cover a large setting of heterogeneous approaches. Vitamin D is one of these approaches, and in many trials the relation of vitamin D serum levels and multiple sclerosis disease risk and activity describes different effects with sometimes inconsistent findings. Animal models are substantial for the research of disease mechanisms, and many of the drugs that are currently in use in multiple sclerosis have been developed, tested, or validated via animal studies. Especially when clinical studies show contradicting findings, the use of standardized settings and information about the mechanistic background is necessary. For this purpose, animal models are an essential tool. There is a variety of different experimental settings and types of animal models available, each of them with own strengths but also weaknesses. This mini-review aims to overview results of vitamin D studies in different animal models and sums up the most important recent findings.

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