Feeling Tired, Moody, and Unfocused? It Could Be Vitamin D Deficiency!

Feeling Tired, Moody, and Unfocused? It Could Be Vitamin D Deficiency!

Many Malaysians blame stress or age for constant fatigue, but studies show that over 70% actually have insufficient Vitamin D.

Most of us know vitamin D as the “sunshine vitamin” that keeps our bones strong. But research has shown it also plays a key role in energy levels, brain function, and mood regulation.

How Vitamin D Works in Our Bodies

  • It supports mitochondrial function → your cells’ powerhouses that produce energy.
  • It influences neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine → affecting focus, motivation, and mood.
  • It modulates the immune system → deficiency can leave you feeling run down more often.

⚠️How Deficiency Feels in Daily Life and Relatable Daily Struggles That Might Not Be "Just Stress"

Here are some everyday struggles people with low vitamin D often describe:

  • Struggling to stay awake during afternoon meetings, despite coffee.
  • Re-reading emails because your brain just won’t focus; or even zoning out during mid-conversations, repetitively reading the same page without absorbing it.
  • Snapping at family or friends, then feeling guilty about your irritability.
  • Waking up after 8 hours of sleep and still feeling unrested.
  • Losing motivation for hobbies you once enjoyed, thinking it’s a ‘phase’ - feeling irritable most of the time, more anxious than usual.

These signs may look like burnout, but for many, they’re a nutrient gap whispering for attention.

Why Do We Often Overlook?

  • Symptoms mimic everyday life – fatigue, mood swings, brain fog → often dismissed as stress or lack of sleep.
  • Not part of routine screening – unless specifically requested, vitamin D isn’t always checked in blood tests.
  • Silent progression – deficiency builds slowly, so changes in energy and mood are subtle and gradual.
  • Other conditions mask it – depression, anxiety, thyroid issues, or anemia are often investigated first.

🌍Who's at Risk

  • People who spend most of their day indoors, less outdoor activities.
  • Those with darker skin tones (require more sun to produce vitamin D).
  • Elderly individuals – reduced skin synthesis.
  • Pregnant women 
  • People with chronic illnesses.
  • Vegans/vegetarians (as vitamin D is mainly from animal products like fish, eggs, dairy)
  • People with malnutrition or poor dietary intake
  • People who have obesity - because their body fat binds to some vitamin D and prevents it from getting into the blood.

Vitamin D deficiency is one of the most under-recognized causes of tiredness, poor focus, and mood swings. Because its symptoms are so ordinary and relatable, it often gets overlooked until it’s severe.

Checking your vitamin D levels and correcting them can bring a surprising boost in energy, clarity, and emotional balance—turning what you thought was “just stress” into something treatable.

Don’t guess, get it checked. Visit your nearest Alpro Clinic to screen your vitamin D levels and take charge of your energy, focus, and mood.


References:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK532266/

https://medlineplus.gov/vitaminddeficiency.html

https://nutritionj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1475-2891-9-65