|
Just One Pill Away
by
Bill Sardi
by Bill Sardi
DIGG THIS
Humanity is
on the verge of a gigantic leap forward in health promotion with
rapid-fire discoveries that a single vitamin pill may vanquish cancer
and heart disease, the two leading causes of mortality in the U.S.,
as well as quell autoimmune disease (rheumatoid arthritis, lupus),
diminish the occurrence of diabetes, reduce obesity, and effectively
treat multiple sclerosis, osteoporosis, Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia
and high blood pressure, plus conquer the common cold and even defeat
tuberculosis, an infectious lung disease that affects one-third
of the people of the world.
Literally leading
medicine "out of dark ages" is the sunshine vitamin
– vitamin D. Long mischaracterized as a vitamin that can be toxic
if taken in amounts that exceed what is found in common multivitamins,
and mistakenly said that vitamin D must be chemically altered to
produce a man-made molecular version that does not induce over-calcification,
most physicians, pharmacists and dieticians have been incorrectly
trained to warn the public away from higher doses of vitamin D.
Most multivitamins
provide no more than 400 IU (international units – a trivial 10
micrograms, or 1/100th of one milligram) of vitamin D,
and the National Academy of Sciences says 2000 IU (50 micrograms)
is the safe upper limit, with toxicity beginning around 10,000 IU
(250 micrograms).
But Reinhold
Vieth PhD, researcher at the University of Toronto, notes that blood
levels don’t even measurably rise till 4000 IU (100 micrograms)
is consumed and toxicity begins at 40,000 IU (1000 micrograms or
1 milligram) only after many weeks of use.
To demonstrate
just how ridiculous the warnings of vitamin D overdose have been,
a person standing in the summer sun for an hour at noontime in a
Southern latitude (Arizona, Florida) in swim trunks would naturally
produce about 10,000 IU (250 micrograms) of vitamin D through skin
exposure. Sun poisoning from vitamin D overdose has never been reported.
[Am J Clinical Nutrition 73 (2): 288-94, Feb 2001; Am J Clinical
Nutrition 69(5): 842-56, May 1999]
Researchers
recently stated that the Food & Nutrition Board’s 2000 IU (50
microgram) upper safe limit is not based on current evidence and
that the absence of any toxicity in healthy adults at 10,000 IU
(250 micrograms) should be supported as the completely safe upper
daily limit. [American Journal Clinical Nutrition 85: 6-18, Jan.
2007]
What doesn’t
vitamin D cure?
The fast-paced
publication of reports extolling the virtues of vitamin D is astounding.
William B Grant PhD of the Sunlight, Nutrition and Health Research
Center in San Francisco, says there is compelling evidence that
low vitamin D levels lead to increased risk of rickets (soft bones),
osteoporosis (loss of bone), 16 cancers (including prostate, breast,
colon, ovary, Hodgkin’s lymphoma), as well as psoriasis, diabetes,
high blood pressure, heart disease, multiple sclerosis and susceptibility
to tuberculosis. [Journal Cosmetic Dermatology 2: 86-98, 2003]
Dr. Robert
P Heaney of Creighton University says that efforts to elevate vitamin
D beyond prevailing levels in North Americans improves calcium absorption,
reduces falls and hip fractures, protects against various cancers
and autoimmune disorders and says that "a strong case can
be made for immediate improvement in vitamin D status of the general
population." [Journal Steroid Biochemistry Molecular Biology
Jan 9, 2007]
Vitamin
D and heart disease
It is increasingly
becoming apparent that it is excessive calcium, and not cholesterol,
that causes hardening of the arteries and heart attacks. Only about
3% of arterial plaque is cholesterol while 50% is calcium. Vitamin
D is an anti-calcifying agent. [Osteoporosis International 18: 251-59,
2007] Kidney disease patients, who are plagued with arterial calcifications,
have 10 times the cardiac death rate compared to the general population.
What most doctors
and the public have been told is that high-dose vitamin D can induce
calcifications of arteries. But Armin Zittermann, PhD, of the Northrhine
Westfalia Heart Center in Germany, reports that both extremely high
and commonly low intake levels of vitamin D induce calcification
of arteries. Calcification from overdose of vitamin D requires many
hundreds of thousands of international units and is rare, whereas
hundreds of millions of adults are deficient in vitamin D and suffer
from calcified arteries as a result of deficiency. Dr. Zitterman
points to a study conducted in Japan where adequate vitamin D levels
achieved via supplementation reduced the death risk from cardiovascular
disease by 70% compared to those who did not use vitamin D supplements.
[Current Opinion Lipidology 18: 41-46, Feb. 2007]
Cancer reduction
In February
of 2006 a research team led by Cedric F. Garland of the University
of California at San Diego, reported that vitamin D supplementation
would reduce the occurrence of a wide variety of cancers by 30-50%.
[American Journal Public Health 96: 252-61, 2006]
It is estimated
that 50,000-63,000 individuals in the United States, and 19,000-25,000
in Great Britain, die prematurely from cancer annually due to insufficient
vitamin D. [Photochemistry Photobiology 81: 1276-86, 2005]
The geographical
colon, breast, ovarian and prostate cancer belt that encircles the
world is in the Northern latitudes. Cities like Seattle, Toronto,
Boston, London, Dublin, Helsinki, Copenhagen, Berlin, Moscow, Anchorage,
fall within this global belt and have high rates of these cancers.
Recently it
was reported that 1000-2000 IU (25-50 micrograms) of vitamin D,
obtained from dietary supplements, sunlight exposure, or the diet,
would cut the risk of colon cancer in half. [American Journal Preventive
Medicine 32: 210-16, 2007]
The common
cold
Dr. John Cannell
MD, who captains the Vitamin D Council, recently authored a paper
which shows the winter increase in colds and flu is attributed to
low seasonal vitamin D levels. Dr. Cannell cites the earlier work
of R. Edgar Hope-Simpson who first proposed that variations in exposure
to solar radiation explains the seasonality of influenza epidemics.
[Epidemiological Infection 134: 1129-40, Dec. 2006] Dr. Cannell
even has a challenge for visitors to the Vitamin
D Council website. He suggests high-dose vitamin D (50,000 IU
– 1.25 milligrams) be consumed for 3 days at the first sign of a
cold or the flu. So far, Dr. Cannell is receiving many reports of
how quickly high-dose vitamin D overpowers the common cold (this
writer tried high-dose vitamin D with the first sign of sniffles
this winter, and the vitamin D therapy worked rapidly both times).
How did
vitamin D escape notice?
Just how vitamin
D has not drawn greater attention is difficult to fathom. In winter,
when vitamin D levels are low, death rates around the world rise.
Winter is the season for heart attacks. The diagnosis of cancer
in winter months shortens survival times. There is a decline in
mood in winter months, leading to an increase in carbohydrate consumption
and obesity. In older adults, low vitamin D levels are associated
with mental depression. [American Journal Geriatric Psychiatry 14:
1032-40, 2006]
It’s not like
vitamin D hasn’t been brought to center stage. Feature articles
in Newsweek and US News & World Report in December of 2006 have
been published. But are doctors informing their patients of the
revolution underway and prescribing vitamin D? Not yet. Will they
ever?
Cutting cancer
rates by 30-50%, heart disease by up to 70%, may be too much of
a shock now that health care is an industry that relies upon volumes
of patients to treat. Prevention is anathema. Medical centers depend
upon large numbers of patients to treat to pay off mortgages for
building projects. Medical device and drug companies must churn
high numbers not only to remain profitable, but to prop up their
stock prices on Wall Street. One wonders whether modern medicine
will ever let this vitamin D revolution happen? It appears health
authorities have misdirected the public.
So far, there
has been no response from the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
regarding this breakthrough. No press conferences like the NIH typically
conducts for breakthrough drugs. The reports of vitamin D’s health
benefits are coming from independent researchers rather than public
health authorities, who are dragging their feet on this surprising
development.
Sun, diet
or pills?
It’s difficult
for most people to get optimal amounts of vitamin D. The diet, at
best, will only provide a few hundred units of vitamin D. Milk is
fortified with synthetic vitamin D2, which is not nearly as potent
as natural D3, which is used in most dietary supplements. A glass
of milk provides only 100 IU (2.5 micrograms).
Fifteen minutes
of sun exposure to 40-percent of the body is suggested daily for
fair-skinned individuals, and more time for dark-skinned people.
People with dark skin pigmentation simply don’t make as much vitamin
D as Caucasians. A recent study conducted in a northern state (Michigan)
found 50% of black mothers and 65% of their newborn infants were
vitamin D deficient. [Clinical Pediatrics 46: 42-44, 2007] Even
adults who receive adequate sun exposure have been found to be deficient
in vitamin D. [Menopause Feb 6, 2007]
Virtually all
of northern Europe is either deficient or undernourished, and in
sunny middle-eastern countries, vitamin D deficiency is rampant
because of clothing that covers most of the skin. [Journal Steroid
Biochemistry Molecular Biology Feb. 5, 2007]
Humans have
been made phobic about sunlight exposure, fearful of skin cancer
and the deadly malignant melanoma. But it is interesting to note
that mortality rates for melanoma rose steeply after sunscreens
came into common use, not before. Sunscreen lotion blocks the vitamin
D-producing UV-B rays, while allowing the deeper-penetrating, cancer-causing
UV-A rays to burn the skin.
Calculating
the cost of deficiency
Researchers
Cedric Garland, William B Grant and Edward D. Gorham claim it would
cost about $1 billion a year to provide 1000 IU (250 micrograms)
of vitamin D to all adult Americans, and the expected benefits for
cancer would be in the range of $16-25 billion. [Recent Results
Cancer Research 174: 225-34, 2007] The total U.S. economic burden
due to vitamin D insufficiency from inadequate exposure to solar
UV-B radiation, diet, food fortification and supplements is estimated
at $40-56 billion annually (2004). [Photochemistry Photobiology
81: 1276-86, 2005]
Many health
food stores stock 1000 IU and 2000 IU vitamin D pills. Higher-dose
5000 IU and 50,000 IU vitamin D pills are more difficult to find
and can be purchased from this
trusted website.
February
20, 2007
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is
a consumer advocate and health journalist, writing from San Dimas,
California. He offers a free downloadable book, The Collapse
of Conventional Medicine, at his
website. Bill Sardi is a spokesperson for various dietary supplement
companies.
Copyright
© 2007 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
Not intended for commercial use or posting on other websites. Permission
to reprint should be obtained from
the author.
Bill
Sardi Archives
|