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Chapter List For:
Nature's Medicines:
  1. Vitamins and Minerals
  2. Herbs
  3. Emerging Supplements
  4. Acidophilus
  5. Amino Acids
  6. Astragalus
  7. Vitamin B6
  8. Vitamin B12
  9. Bee Pollen
  10. Bee Propolis
  11. Beta-Carotene and Vitamin A
  12. Bioflavoniods
  13. Biotin
  14. Black Cohosh
  15. Brewers Yeast
  16. Bromelain
  17. Vitamin C
  18. Calcium
  19. Cats Claw
  20. Cayenne
  21. Chromium
  22. Coenzyme Q10
  23. Copper
  24. Creatine
  25. Vitamin D
  26. Dhea
  27. Vitamin E
  28. Echinacea
  29. Enzymes
  30. Feverfew
  31. Fiber
  32. Fish Oil
  33. Flaxseed
  34. Folic Acid
  35. Gamma-Linolenic Acid
  36. Garlic
  37. Ginger
  38. Ginko
  39. Ginseng
  40. Goldenseal
  41. Gotu Kola
  42. Hawthorn
  43. Iron
  44. Vitamin K
  45. Kava Kava
  46. Lecithin and Choline
  47. Magnesium
  48. Melatonin
  49. Milk Thistle
  50. Nettle
  51. Niacin
  52. Pantothenic Acid
  53. Pau D Arco
  54. Phytonutrients
  55. Potassium
  56. Riboflavin
  57. Royal Jelly
  58. Saw Palmetto
  59. Selenium
  60. Shark Cartilage
  61. St Johns Wort
  62. Thiamin
  63. Valerian
  64. Zinc
  65. Alzheimers Disease and Memory Loss
  66. Anemia
  67. Angina
  68. Asthma
  69. Bedsores
  70. Binge-Eating Disorder
  71. Birth Defects
  72. Bladder Infections
  73. Breast Cancer
  74. Cancer
  75. Canker Sores
  76. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
  77. Cataracts
  78. Celiac Disease
  79. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
  80. Cold and Flu
  81. Cold Sores
  82. Constipation
  83. Depression
  84. Dermatitis
  85. Diabetes
  86. Diarrhea
  87. Diverticulitis
  88. Emphysema
  89. Endometriosis
  90. Fibromyalgia
  91. Fingernail Problems
  92. Gallstones
  93. Genital Herpes
  94. Gingivitis
  95. Gout
  96. Hair Loss
  97. Headache
  98. Heartburn
  99. Heart Arrhythmia
  100. High Blood Pressure
  101. High Cholesterol
  102. Hiv and Aids
  103. Impotence
  104. Indigestion
  105. Infertility
  106. Insomnia
  107. Intermittent Claudication
  108. Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  109. Kidney Stones
  110. Leg Cramps
  111. Lupus
  112. Macular Degeneration
  113. Menopausal Changes
  114. Mitral Valve Prolapse
  115. Morning Sickness
  116. Multiple Sclerosis
  117. Muscle Soreness
  118. Osteoarthritis
  119. Osteoporosis
  120. Overweight
  121. Parkinsons Disease
  122. Phlebitis
  123. Pms and Menstrual Problems
  124. Prostate Problems
  125. Raynauds Syndrome
  126. Restless Legs Syndrome
  127. Rheumatoid Arthritis
  128. Sciatica
  129. Scleroderma
  130. Shingles
  131. Stress
  132. Sunburn
  133. Taste and Smell Loss
  134. Tinnitus
  135. Vaginitis
  136. Varicose Veins
  137. Water Retention
  138. Wrinkles
  139. Yeast Infections
From the Rodale book, Nature's Medicines:
Edit id 1847

Vitamin D


Previous Chapter Creatine
Next Chapter Age Spots


vitamin D

Vitamin D is an essential nutrient that our bodies can make on any reasonably sunny day. In fact, it’s called the sunshine vitamin because we can make all we need if we have enough sunlight hitting our skin.

Ultraviolet rays from the sun convert one type of chemical compound in our skin to a substance called previtamin D3, which is then converted to vitamin D3. This in turn is converted twice more, in the liver and kidneys, into active vitamin D. While either liver or kidney disease may cause a shortage, people who have liver disease can usually make enough to get by. People with kidney disease, on the other hand, often need to take the active form of vitamin D, which is available only by prescription, to prevent deficiency.

In the body, vitamin D acts more like a hormone than a vitamin. In other words, it has a direct effect on organs such as the intestines, kidneys, and bones. The cells of these organs have receptor sites, similar to docking platforms, just for vitamin D. All of these organs respond to the vitamin by making calcium available for bone growth.

Harden Up and Grow Right

Open just about any nutrition textbook to the pages on vitamin D and you’ll see haunting photographs of children with rickets, a deficiency condition. Their heads are large because their skull bones haven’t fused properly, and their legs are bowed because their bones are too soft to support their weight.

Rickets is no longer common in the United States, but "vitamin D deficiency may play a contributing role in two common conditions that affect older adults," says Hector DeLuca, Ph.D., chairman of biochemistry at the University of Wisconsin in Madison and a leading vitamin D researcher. One of these conditions is osteomalacia, or softening of the bones, and the other is osteoporosis, or bone loss. "Low blood levels of vitamin D make both of these conditions worse," he says. In fact, just a few weeks’ worth of the Daily Value, which is 400 international units (IU), or 10 micrograms, will improve some symptoms of these conditions if vitamin D levels are low. "People improve dramatically once they start getting enough vitamin D," Dr. DeLuca says.

Vitamin D helps to make calcium and phosphorus available in the blood that bathes the bones. As these essential minerals are deposited, the bones mineralize, or harden.

It makes calcium and phosphorus available in three ways. In the intestines, it sends cells the message, "Absorb more calcium and phosphorus." In the kidneys, the instruction is "Don’t pee out that calcium and phosphorus—recirculate it." And when blood levels of calcium begin to drop, vitamin D sends bone cells the message, "Start breaking down bone and get that calcium into the bloodstream."

That final message is important because calcium is needed throughout our bodies to maintain normal muscle and nerve function. Low levels can lead to fatal convulsions. And if you have only calcium in circulation—without the vitamin D that’s necessary to help incorporate it—you could end up with a calcium deficiency. You need that calcium, and you also need vitamin D to help it do its job.

SUPPLEMENTSNAPSHOT

Vitamin D

May help: Osteomalacia, osteoporosis, and multiple sclerosis.

Daily Value: 400 international units (10 micrograms).

Who’s at risk for deficiency: People who have chronic intestinal absorption problems or chronic liver or kidney disease, people who don’t eat many dairy products and aren’t exposed to sunlight, and those who use sunscreen at all times.

Good food sources: Fatty fish such as mackerel and salmon and fortified milk and milk products. (The best nonfood source of vitamin D is the sun.)

Cautions and possible side effects: Large doses (more than 2,000 IU daily) over several months can cause high blood levels of calcium, kidney stones, and calcium deposits in heart and kidney tissues, which can be fatal.

Why D Is a Big Deal

Bones aren’t the only parts of our bodies that vitamin D befriends. Researchers are finding more and more places where it’s active.

Forms of vitamin D are being studied in the laboratory for the treatment of breast, prostate, and colon cancer, plus a deadly skin cancer, melanoma. One form of vitamin D, as a topical cream, can cure up to 70 percent of people who have psoriasis.

Researchers don’t know exactly how vitamin D works in these cases, but like vitamin A, it promotes a process called cell differentiation. Like a traffic cop, it directs developing cells in the right direction, toward their proper, mature form. In the skin, for example, it normalizes the growth rate of cells called keratinocytes. In psoriasis, these cells proliferate like crazy without going through their normal growth process. That’s what causes the snowstorm of flaky skin.

Also, a deficiency of vitamin D "almost certainly plays a role in the development of type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes," Dr. DeLuca adds. The vitamin is needed for cells in the pancreas, called islet cells, to produce insulin, the hormone that allows cells to take up blood sugar. Without adequate vitamin D, islet cells don’t produce insulin.

In animals with an inherited tendency to develop type 1 diabetes, the active vitamin D hormone helps prevent the disease, Dr. DeLuca says. While studies have not yet been done in humans, researchers speculate whether it might prove to have a similar effect.

Help for T-Helpers

Vitamin D also helps to regulate some of the white blood cells that make up the immune system. In animals, it helps one kind of "supervisor" (T-helper) cell release biochemicals that stop another kind of T-helper cell from attacking the body’s own tissues. Thus, in animals at least, this vitamin helps block the destructive assault that occurs in autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and multiple sclerosis, Dr. DeLuca says.

Researchers at the University of Wisconsin may soon learn whether fairly small doses of the active form of vitamin D can help stop nerve-damaging lesions in people who are newly diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.

Milk May Let You Down

Vitamin D deficiency is a real problem in the United States, and it becomes increasingly likely in people age 50 and older, says Michael Holick, M.D., Ph.D., chief of the section on endocrinology, nutrition, and diabetes at Boston University Medical Center. People just don’t get enough of the few foods that contain vitamin D—milk and fatty fish such as mackerel and salmon.

"In fact, milk may not be as reliable a source as people think it is," Dr. Holick says. In the United States, milk is generally fortified with 400 IU of vitamin D per quart. When Dr. Holick’s laboratory analyzed samples of milk in all regions of the United States and western Canada, however, researchers found that many didn’t contain as much vitamin D as they were supposed to. Fat-free milk was worst: One out of every six samples contained no vitamin D at all.

"Most older people, especially those who use sunscreen, probably don’t get enough sun to meet their vitamin D requirements," Dr. Holick says. Nevertheless it is possible to get an adequate amount of vitamin D from sunlight, he says. Dr. Holick recommends that you expose your hands, face, and arms to sunlight in the midmorning or afternoon. If you live in the north—about the latitude of Boston—you’ll have enough exposure if you get 5 to 15 minutes of sunlight three times a week in spring, summer, and fall. Winter sun isn’t strong enough to meet your needs for vitamin D unless you live in Florida or a similar clime.

Supplements are another reliable way to get what you need if you’re not getting enough vitamin D from dairy sources or sunlight. You can take a multivitamin/mineral supplement that offers the Daily Value of 400 IU.

The National Research Council, which sets standard, official guidelines for U.S. health agencies, has recommended a daily dose of 600 IU for people over 70. Some studies show that people over 65 benefit from getting up to 800 IU a day, especially during the winter months.

Previous Chapter Creatine
Next Chapter Age Spots

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