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Darryl W. Eyles
Researcher at University of Queensland
Publications - 201
Citations - 13783
Darryl W. Eyles is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vitamin D and neurology & vitamin D deficiency. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 194 publications receiving 11893 citations. Previous affiliations of Darryl W. Eyles include Centre for Mental Health & Allen Institute for Brain Science.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Distribution of the Vitamin D receptor and 1α-hydroxylase in human brain
TL;DR: The distribution of the 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 receptor (VDR), and 1α-hydroxylase (1α-OHase), the enzyme responsible for the formation of the active vitamin in the human brain, was reported for the first time.
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Vitamin D, effects on brain development, adult brain function and the links between low levels of vitamin D and neuropsychiatric disease
TL;DR: The preclinical findings revealing that vitamin D can regulate catecholamine levels and protect against specific Alzheimer-like pathology increase the plausibility of this link.
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Vitamin D3 and brain development.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that rats born to vitamin D(3)-deficient mothers had profound alterations in the brain at birth, which would suggest that low maternal vitamin D (3) has important ramifications for the developing brain.
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Vitamin D, a neuro-immunomodulator: implications for neurodegenerative and autoimmune diseases.
TL;DR: How vitamin D imbalance may lay the foundation for a range of adult disorders, including brain pathologies (Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, depression) and immune-mediated disorders (rheumatoid arthritis, type I diabetes mellitus, systemic lupus erythematosus or inflammatory bowel diseases) is assessed.
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Neonatal Vitamin D Status and Risk of Schizophrenia: A Population-Based Case-Control Study
John J. McGrath,Darryl W. Eyles,Carsten Bøcker Pedersen,Cameron Anderson,Pauline Ko,Thomas H. J. Burne,Bent Nørgaard-Pedersen,David M. Hougaard,Preben Bo Mortensen +8 more
TL;DR: Both low and high concentrations of neonatal vitamin D are associated with increased risk of schizophrenia, and it is feasible that this exposure could contribute to a sizeable proportion of cases in Denmark.