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Herb News
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Vitamin D in a New Light |
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by Donald W.
Miller, Jr., MD
There are thirteen vitamins humans
need for growth and development and to maintain good health. The
human body cannot make these essential bio-molecules. They must be
supplied in the diet or by bacteria in the intestine, except for
vitamin D. Skin makes vitamin D when exposed to ultraviolet B (UVB)
radiation from the sun. A light-skinned person will synthesize
20,000 IU (international units) of vitamin D in 20 minutes
sunbathing on a Caribbean beach.
Vitamin D is also unique in another
way. It is the only vitamin that is a hormone,
a type of steroid hormone known as a secosteroid, with three
carbon rings.
Steroid hormones such as cortisone,
estrogen, and testosterone have four carbon rings. Ultraviolet B
radiation in sunlight breaks open one of the rings in a steroid
alcohol present in the skin, 7-dehydrocholesterol, to form
vitamin D (cholecalciferol). The liver changes this molecule into
its circulating form, 25-hydroxyvitamin D (calcidiol,
25[OH]D), the "vitamin D" blood tests measure. Cells throughout the
body absorb 25-hydroxyvitamin D and change it into
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (calcitriol), the active form of vitamin
D that attaches directly to receptors on the DNA of genes in the
cell’s nucleus.
The vitamin D hormone
system controls the expression of more than 200 genes and the
proteins they produce. In addition to its well-known role in calcium
metabolism, vitamin D activates genes that control cell growth and
programmed cell death (apoptosis), express mediators that regulate
the immune system, and release neurotransmitters (e.g., serotonin)
that influence one’s mental state.
Severe deficiencies of some vitamins
cause vitamin-specific diseases, such as beriberi (from a lack of
vitamin B1, thiamine), pellagra (B3, niacin), pernicious anemia
(B12), and scurvy, (vitamin C). A deficiency in iodine produces a
goiter, mental retardation, and, when severe, cretinism.
Rickets, a softening and bending of
bones in children, first described in 1651, is another
nutritionally-specific disease. It reached epidemic proportions
following the industrial revolution, which began in the 1750s. In
the 19th century, before the importance of exposing
children to sunlight was recognized, the majority of children that
lived in cities with sunless, narrow alleyways and pollution
developed rickets. An autopsy study done in Boston in the late 1800s
showed that more than 80 percent of children had rickets.
Early
in the 20th century an investigator found that cod liver
oil could prevent rickets in puppies. The nutritional factor in the
oil that promotes skeletal calcium deposition was named "vitamin D,"
alphabetically after already-named vitamins A, B, and C. Rickets was
thought to be another vitamin-deficiency disease, and the curative
agent, a steroid hormone, was mislabeled a "vitamin."
Now, a century later, a wealth of
evidence suggests that rickets, its most florid manifestation, is
the tip of a vitamin D insufficiency/deficiency iceberg. A lack of
Vitamin D can also trigger infections (influenza and tuberculosis),
autoimmune diseases (multiple sclerosis, Type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid
arthritis, and inflammatory bowel disease), cardiovascular disease,
and cancer. Practitioners of conventional medicine (i.e., most MDs)
are just beginning to appreciate the true impact of vitamin D
deficiency. In 1990, medical journals published less than 20 reviews
and editorials on vitamin D. Last year they published more than 300
reviews and editorials on this vitamin/hormone. This year, on July
19, 2007, even the New England Journal of Medicine, the
bellwether of pharmaceutically-oriented conventional medicine in the
U.S., published a review on vitamin D that addresses its role in
autoimmune diseases, infections, cardiovascular disease, and cancer
(N Engl J Med 2007;357:266–281).
Up until 1980, doctors thought that
vitamin D was only involved in calcium, phosphorus, and bone
metabolism. Then two investigators
proposed that vitamin D and sunlight could reduce the risk of
colon cancer. A growing body of evidence
indicates that they were right and that vitamin D can prevent a
whole host of cancers – colon, breast, lung, pancreatic, ovarian,
and prostate cancer among them. Colon cancer rates are 4 to 6
times higher in North America and Europe, where solar radiation is
less intense, particularly during the winter months, compared to the
incidence of colon cancer near the equator. People with low blood
levels of vitamin D and those who live at higher latitudes are at
increased risk for acquiring various kinds of cancer. Many
epidemiological, cohort, and case control studies prove, at least on
a more likely than not basis, that vitamin D supplements and
adequate exposure to sunlight play an important role in cancer
prevention (Am J Public Health 2006;96:252–261).
There is now
strong scientific evidence that vitamin D does indeed reduce the
risk of cancer. Evidence from a well-conducted, randomized,
placebo-controlled, double-blind trial proves beyond a reasonable
doubt that this is the case, at least with regard to breast cancer.
A Creighton University study has shown that women over the age of 55
who took a 1,100 IU/day vitamin D supplement, with calcium, and were
followed for 4 years had a highly statistically significant (P
<0.005) 75% reduction in breast cancer (diagnosed after the
first 12 months) compared with women who took a placebo (Am J
Clin Nutr 2007;85:1568–1591).
Some of the
genes vitamin D activates make proteins that halt cancer by inducing
apoptosis (programmed cell death), which destroys aberrant cells
before they become cancerous, like adenoma cells in the
colon and rectum.
Others promote cell differentiation and reining in of out-of-control
growth of cancer cells (like
prostate cancer cells).
Vitamin D-expressed genes inhibit angiogenesis, the formation of new
blood vessels that malignant tumors need to grow, as studies on
lung and
breast cancers show. Other genes
inhibit metastases, preventing cancer that arises in one organ from
spreading its cells to other parts of the body, as studied in
breast, and
prostate
cancers.
Vitamin D also
expresses genes that curb cardiovascular disease. One gene controls
the renin-angiotensin system, which when overactive causes
hypertension (high blood pressure). Others stifle the immune
system-mediated inflammatory response that propagates
atherosclerosis and congestive heart failure (Curr Opin Lipidol
2007;18:41–46).
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a
neurologically devastating disease that afflicts people with low
vitamin D levels. Its victims include the cellist Jacqueline Du Pré,
whose first symptom was loss of sensation in her fingers, and some
500,000 Americans who currently suffer from this malady. MS is an
autoimmune disease, where the body’s immune system attacks and
destroys its own cells. With multiple sclerosis, T cells in the
adaptive immune system, Th1 cells (CD4 T helper type 1 cells),
attack the myelin sheath (insulation) of the axons (nerve fibers)
that neurons (brain cells) use to transmit electrical signals. The
Vitamin D hormone system regulates and tones down the potentially
self-destructive actions of Th1 cells. These cells make their own
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D if there is a sufficient amount of vitamin D
(25-hydroxyvitamin D) circulating in the blood. Researchers have
shown that the risk of MS decreases as the level of vitamin D in the
blood increases (JAMA 2006;296:2832–2838). People living at
higher latitudes have an increased risk of MS and other autoimmune
diseases. Studies show that people who live below latitude 35°
(e.g., Atlanta) until the age of 10 reduce the risk of MS by 50% (Toxicology
2002;181–182:71–78 and Eur J Clin Nutr
2004;58:1095–1109).
In a study published earlier this
year, researchers evaluated 79 pairs of identical twins where only
one twin in each pair had MS, despite having the same genetic
susceptibility. They found that the MS-free twin had spent more time
outdoors in the sun – during hot days, sun tanning, and at the
beach. The authors conclude that
sunshine is
protective against MS (Neurology 2007;69:381–388).
New research
suggests that influenza is also a disease triggered by vitamin D
deficiency. Influenza virus exists in the population year-round, but
influenza epidemics are seasonal and occur only in the winter (in
northern latitudes), when vitamin D blood levels are at their nadir.
Vitamin D-expressed genes instruct macrophages, the front-line
defenders in the innate immune system, to make antimicrobial
peptides, which are like antibiotics (Science
2006;311:1770–1773). These peptides attack and destroy influenza
virus particles, and in human carriers keep it at bay. (Neutrophils
and natural killer cells in the innate immune system and epithelial
cells lining the respiratory tract also synthesize these virucidal
peptides.) Other vitamin D-expressed genes rein in macrophages
fighting an infection to keep them from overreacting and releasing
too many inflammatory agents (cytokines) that can damage infected
tissue. In the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, which killed 50
million people, of which 500,000 were Americans, young healthy
adults (as happened to my 22-year-old grandmother) would wake up in
the morning feeling well, start drowning in their own inflammation
as the day wore on, and be dead by midnight. Autopsies showed
complete destruction of the epithelial cells lining the respiratory
tract due, as researchers now know, to a macrophage-induced overly
severe inflammatory reaction to the virus. These flu victims
were attacked and killed by their own immune system, something
researchers have found vitamin D can prevent (Epidemiol Infect
2006;134:1129–1140).
Randomized clinical trials need to be
done to test the vitamin D theory of influenza. With what we
know now, however, perhaps an annual shot of 600,000 IU of vitamin D
(Med J Aust 2005;183:10–12) would be more effective in
preventing influenza than a jab of flu vaccine.
Our species evolved
in equatorial Africa where the sun, shining directly overhead,
supplies its inhabitants with year-round ultraviolet B photons for
making vitamin D. Our African ancestors absorbed much higher doses
of vitamin D living exposed in that environment compared to the
amount most humans obtain today. A single mutation that occurred
around 50,000 years ago is responsible for the appearance of white
skin in humans. It turns out that a difference in one rung, or base
pair, in the 3 billion-rung DNA ladder that constitutes the human
genome determines the color of one’s skin (Science
2005;310:1782–1786). White skin, with less melanin, synthesizes
vitamin D in sunlight six times faster than dark skin. People
possessing this mutation were able to migrate to higher latitudes,
populate Europe, Asia, and North America, and be able to make enough
vitamin D to survive.
The majority of the world’s
population now lives above latitude 35° N and is unable to
synthesize vitamin D from sunlight for a period of time in winter
owing to the angle of the sun. At a large solar zenith angle, ozone
in the upper atmosphere will completely block UVB radiation. In
Seattle (47° N) and London (52° N), from October to April UVB
photons are blocked by the atmosphere so one’s skin cannot make
vitamin D. (The half-life of circulating vitamin D is approximately
one month.) Making matters worse, even when UVB radiation is
available in sunlight, health authorities, led by the American
Academy of Dermatology, warn people to shield themselves from the
sun to avoid getting skin cancer.
Except for oily fish
like (wild-only) salmon, mackerel, and sardines and cod liver oil –
and also sun-dried mushrooms – very little vitamin D is naturally
present in our food. Milk, orange juice, butter, and breakfast
cereal are fortified with vitamin D, but with only 100 IU per
serving. One would have to drink 200 8-oz. glasses of milk to obtain
as much vitamin D as skin makes fully exposed to the noonday sun.
The U.S. Food and Nutrition Board in
the Institute of Medicine puts the Recommended Dietary Allowance
(RDA) for vitamin D at 200 IU for children and adults less than 50
years old, 400 IU for adults age 50–70, and 800 IU for adults over
the age of 70. Most multivitamin
preparations contain 400 IU of vitamin D. These guidelines are
directed towards maintaining bone health and are sufficient to
prevent rickets – but not cancer, cardiovascular disease, multiple
sclerosis, or influenza. Without evidence to support it, the board
arbitrarily set the safe upper limit for vitamin D consumption at
2,000 IU/day.
Vitamin D (25-hydroxyvitamin D) blood
levels, the barometer for vitamin D status, are measured in
nanograms per milliliter (ng/ml) or nanomoles per liter (nmol/l),
where ng/ml = 0.4 nmol/l. Children and adults need a vitamin D blood
level >8 ng/ml to prevent rickets and osteomalacia
(demineralization and softening of bones) respectively. It takes a
concentration >20 ng/ml to keep parathyroid hormone levels in
a normal range. A level >34 ng/ml is required to ensure peak
intestinal calcium absorption. Finally, neuromuscular performance
steadily improves in elderly people as vitamin D levels rise up to
50 ng/ml. Accordingly, a vitamin D blood level <8 ng/ml is
regarded as severely deficient; 8–19, deficient; and
20–29, insufficient, i.e., too low for good health. A level
>30 ng/ml is sufficient, but experts now consider 50–99 ng/ml
to be the optimal level of vitamin D. Levels 100–150 ng/ml
are excessive and >150 ng/ml, potentially toxic.
A majority of Americans have
insufficient or deficient vitamin D blood levels. In veterans
undergoing heart surgery at the Seattle VA hospital, I found that
78% had a low vitamin D level: 12% were insufficient; 56%,
deficient; and 10% were severely deficient.
In order to enjoy optimal
health, we should maintain a vitamin D blood level of ≥50–99 ng/ml.
Without sun exposure, to reach a level of 50 ng/ml requires taking a
5,000 IU/day vitamin D supplement. There are two kinds of vitamin D
supplements: vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol), the kind our skin makes,
and vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol), a synthetic variant made by
irradiating plants. Vitamin D2 is only 10–30% as effective in
raising 25-hydroxyvitamin D blood levels compared to vitamin D3,
leading the authors of a recent study conclude, "Vitamin D2 should
not be regarded as a nutrient suitable for supplementation or
fortification" (Am J Clin Nutr 2006;84:694–697).
Concerns about vitamin D toxicity are
overblown, along with those about sun exposure. As one researcher in
the field puts it, "Worrying about vitamin D toxicity is like
worrying about drowning when you’re dying of thirst." The LD50 of
vitamin D in dogs (the dose that will kill half the animals) is
3,520,000 IU/kilogram. One can take a 10,000 IU vitamin D supplement
every day, month after month safely, with no evidence of adverse
effect. (Am J Clin Nutr 1999;69:842–856). A person must
consume 50,000 IU a day for several months before hypercalcemia (an
elevated calcium level in the blood, which is the initial
manifestation of vitamin D toxicity) might occur. Vitamin D in a
physiologic dose (5,000 IU/day) prevents the build up of calcium in
blood vessels. (Circulation 1997;96:1755–1760). If one takes
10,000 IU of vitamin D a day and spends a lot of time in the sun, it
would be prudent to check vitamin D blood level to ensure that it
does not exceed 100 ng/ml.
Sensible sun exposure should be
encouraged, not maligned. If one avoids sunburn, the sun’s
health-giving benefits far outweigh its detrimental effects. A large
body of evidence indicates that sunlight does not cause the most
lethal form of skin cancer, malignant melanoma. A U.S. Navy study
found that melanoma occurred more frequently in sailors who worked
indoors all the time. Those who worked outdoors had the lowest
incidence of melanoma. Also, most melanomas appear on parts of the
body that are seldom exposed to sunlight (Arch Environ Health
1990;45:261–267). Sun exposure is associated with increased
survival from melanoma (J Natl Cancer Inst 2005;97:195–199).
Another study showed that people who had longer lifetime exposure to
the sun without burning were less likely to get melanomas than those
with less exposure (J Invest Dermatol 2003;120:1087–1093.)
The rise in skin cancers over the
last 25 years parallels the rise in use of sunscreen lotions, which
block vitamin D-producing UVB radiation but not cancer-causing
ultraviolet A radiation (UVA). (Newer sunscreen lotions also block
out UVA.) Each year there are 8,000 deaths from melanoma and 1,500
deaths from nonmelanoma (squamous and basal cell) skin cancer.
Surgical excision of nonmelanoma skin cancers cures them, except in
rare cases where the growth has been allowed to linger for a long
time and metastasize. Dr. John Cannell, Executive Director of the
Vitamin D Council, makes this point: 1,500 deaths occur each year
from non-melanoma skin cancer, but 1,500 deaths occur each day
from other cancers that vitamin D in optimal doses might well
prevent. (The Vitamin D Council
website is an
excellent source of information on vitamin D.)
The U.S. government
and its citizens currently spend $2,000 billion dollars ($2
trillion) on "health care," i.e., sickness care, each year. The cost
of taking a 5,000 IU supplement of vitamin D every day for a year is
$22.00. The cost for 300 million Americans taking this supplement
would be $6.6 billion dollars. The number and variety of diseases
that vitamin D at this dose could prevent, starting with a 50
percent reduction in cancer, is mind-boggling. If everyone took
5,000 IU/day of vitamin D, the U.S. "health care" industry would
shrink. It would no longer account for 16 percent of the gross
domestic product.
Health food stores typically do not
sell vitamin D3 in 5,000 IU tablets, but they are readily available
online.
BIO-TECH Pharmacal produces both 5,000 and 50,000 IU tablets of
Vitamin D3, which online sites sell. Some people prefer to take one
50,000 IU table a week (equivalent to 7,100 IU a day) and a
three-day course of 150,000 IU vitamin D at the first sign of a
cold.
Two sites that sell both "D3-5"
(5,000 IU) and "D3-50" (50,000 IU) are
here and
here.
September 10, 2007
Donald Miller
(send him mail)
is a cardiac surgeon and Professor of Surgery at the University of
Washington in Seattle. He is a member of
Doctors for Disaster
Preparedness and writes articles on a variety of subjects
for LewRockwell.com. His web site is
www.donaldmiller.com
Copyright © 2007 LewRockwell.com
PLEASE NOTE: The opinions of the above article do
not necessarily reflect those of Planet Botanic Canada
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