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Chapter List For:
Prevention's Healing with Vitamins:
  1. Beta-Carotene
  2. Biotin
  3. Calcium
  4. Drugs Can Sabotage Your Nutrition
  5. Folic Acid
  6. Iron
  7. Magnesium
  8. Niacin
  9. Pantothenic Acid
  10. Phosphorus
  11. Potassium
  12. Riboflavin
  13. Selenium
  14. Sodium
  15. Sulfur
  16. Thiamin
  17. Trace Minerals
  18. Vitamin A
  19. Vitamin B12
  20. Vitamin B6
  21. Vitamin C
  22. Vitamin D
  23. Vitamin E
  24. Vitamin K
  25. Zinc
  26. Age Spots
  27. Aging
  28. Alcoholism
  29. Allergies
  30. Alzheimers Disease
  31. Anemia
  32. Angina
  33. Asthma
  34. Bedsores
  35. Beriberi
  36. Birth Defects
  37. Bladder Infections
  38. Bruises
  39. Burns
  40. Cancer
  41. Canker Sores
  42. Cardiomyopathy
  43. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
  44. Cataracts
  45. Celiac Disease
  46. Cervical Dysplasia
  47. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
  48. Colds
  49. Cold Sores
  50. Cystic Fibrosis
  51. Depression
  52. Dermatitis
  53. Diabetes
  54. Diarrhea
  55. Eating Disorders
  56. Endometriosis
  57. Epilepsy
  58. Fatigue
  59. Fibrocystic Breasts
  60. Fingernail Problems
  61. Gallstones
  62. Genital Herpes
  63. Gingivitis
  64. Glaucoma
  65. Gout
  66. Hair Loss
  67. Heart Arrhythmia
  68. Heart Disease
  69. High Blood Pressure
  70. High Cholesterol
  71. HIV
  72. Immunity
  73. Infertility
  74. Insomnia
  75. Intermittent Claudication
  76. Kidney Stones
  77. Leg Cramps
  78. Lou Gehrigs Disease
  79. Lupus
  80. Macular Degeneration
  81. Memory Loss
  82. Ménière’s Disease
  83. Menopausal Problems
  84. Menstrual Problems
  85. Migraines
  86. Mitral Valve Prolapse
  87. Morning Sickness
  88. Multiple Sclerosis
  89. Night Blindness
  90. Osteoarthritis
  91. Osteoporosis
  92. Overweight
  93. Parkinsons Disease
  94. Pellagra
  95. Phlebitis
  96. Premenstrual Syndrome
  97. Prostate Problems
  98. Psoriasis
  99. Raynaud's Disease
  100. Restless Legs Syndrome
  101. Rheumatoid Arthritis
  102. Rickets
  103. Scleroderma
  104. Scurvy
  105. Shingles
  106. Smog Exposure
  107. Smoking
  108. Sunburn
  109. Surgery
  110. Taste and Smell Problems
  111. Tinnitus
  112. Varicose Veins
  113. Water Retention
  114. Wilson's Disease
  115. Wrinkles
  116. Yeast Infections
From the Rodale book, Prevention's Healing with Vitamins:
Edit id 1237

Rickets


Previous Chapter Rheumatoid Arthritis
Next Chapter Scleroderma


Building Strong Bones

Was Tiny Tim, the lovable crippled child in Charles Dickens's classic A Christmas Carol, suffering from the vitamin D-deficiency bone disease called rickets?

One expert argues that it's likely, since nineteenth-century London was, as he puts it, "miserable." Any sunlight capable of piercing the English gloom was almost certainly trapped by industrial smog back then.

Sunlight is not the only potential source of rickets-preventing vitamin D, of course. But the Cratchit family's meager diet was hardly healthful enough to prevent a case of the infamous disease that crippled so many nineteenth-century children.

Bah, humbug, retort other experts. The Cratchit child clearly had some other crippling disease.

That the experts amuse themselves by debating Tiny Tim's condition says a lot about the frequency of rickets today. Aside from cases in which people avoid certain foods or the sun for dietary or religious reasons, this condition, called common rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults, is more a medical curiosity than an ongoing concern.

Almost Gone, but Not Forgotten

Still, doctors have to be prepared to diagnose either. Not too long ago, at Children's Hospital of New Jersey in Newark, doctors were looking at the
x-rays of a 15-month-old girl suffering from respiratory problems when they discovered that bones in her shoulder were frayed. This is a common sign of rickets, says Robert Rapaport, M.D., director of the Division of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey/New Jersey Medical School in Newark.

Further investigation revealed that the child came from a strict religious home where she wore clothing that covered all but her nose and forehead. The combination of her manner of dress and the absence of dairy products in her diet contributed to her condition, reports Dr. Rapaport.

An unusual case, perhaps, but "these kinds of cases demonstrate that
vitamin D-deficiency rickets is still around," says Dr. Rapaport. "Both health care professionals and parents need to be educated about factors that predispose to rickets and about measures that can prevent its development."

Without sunlight (vitamin D is synthesized in the skin by the action of ultraviolet light) or dairy products, both sources of vitamin D, young, growing bones are unable to perform a task known as mineralization, which is the process that adds minerals needed for bone development, says Binita R. Shah, M.D., professor of clinical pediatrics and director of pediatric emergency medicine at the State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn. Dark skin, colder climates, abundant clothing and industrial pollution are all potential barriers to vitamin D production by the skin, says Dr. Shah.

Boning Up on Vitamin D

Bone is a dynamic organ that is constantly being formed and re-formed, says Dr. Shah. Vitamin D is essential for bone formation and mineralization. It also ensures that there are proper amounts of calcium and phosphorus on hand for bone growth. It does this in three ways: first, by making certain that these minerals are absorbed in the intestines; second, by bringing calcium from bones into the blood; and third, by aiding the reabsorption of calcium and phosphorus by the kidneys, says Dr. Shah.

"When you see a case of rickets, the body is desperately trying to make bone, but adequate calcium and phosphorus aren't available. It's a poor effort, resulting in unmineralized bone accumulation," says Dr. Shah.

As a result, a child with rickets will have ankles and wrists that flare, with noticeable knobby bumps, and weakened leg bones that bow under the child's own weight. Other symptoms include a lack of muscle tone, a disproportionately large head and forehead and delayed infant milestones such as sitting up, standing and the appearance of teeth.

Prevention of rickets and osteomalacia is as simple as including good sources of vitamin D, such as fish (especially sardines and salmon) and fortified milk, in the diet. Dr. Shah recommends human milk for infants, but in this case, she stresses the importance of vitamin D supplementation, since human milk contains little vitamin D. For infants who are not given human milk, infant formula contains all of the necessary nutrients. Also, fortified whole milk is a very important part of an infant's diet, notes Dr. Shah. Since fortified milk is important for adults as well, she adds, skim milk may be a wise choice for them.

Because of fortification, an eight-ounce glass of milk provides about 100 international units of vitamin D. The Daily Value is 400 international units. Experts say that taking more than 600 international units of vitamin D a day can be toxic, with symptoms that may include high blood pressure, kidney failure and coma. For this reason, daily doses exceeding 600 international units should be taken only under medical supervision.

For confirmed rickets cases, Dr. Shah prescribes something called stosstherapy, a form of treatment that provides a total of 600,000 international units of vitamin D, given in a single day in six divided doses. This amount of vitamin D is highly toxic and should be taken only under the supervision of a physician. Used more often in Europe, stosstherapy is preferred when there's doubt whether a child will continue to get appropriate amounts of vitamin D to treat rickets. "This kind of therapy not only heals the rickets but also maintains vitamin D levels for three months," says Dr. Shah. Another benefit: Doctors know in four to seven days whether the rickets is caused by diet or another factor, such as heredity.

Prescriptions for Healing

Because vitamin D is so readily available from sunshine and fortified milk products, rickets, a vitamin D-deficiency disease, is relatively rare in this country. Here's what doctors recommend for both prevention and treatment.

Nutrient Daily Amount


Prevention

Vitamin D 400 international units

Treatment

Vitamin D 600,000 international units, taken as 6 divided doses (administered in 1 day under the supervision of a doctor)


MEDICAL ALERT: Doses of more than 600 international units of vitamin D a day can be toxic. Symptoms may include high blood pressure, kidney failure and coma. Vitamin D in such high daily doses should be taken only under the supervision of your doctor.

Previous Chapter Rheumatoid Arthritis
Next Chapter Scleroderma

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