D Day

People dealt with deficiency at the turn of the 20th century. Who ever thought we’ be talking about rickets in 2008?

Despite its familiarity, is pretty puzzling. Not really a at all, it is actually a fat-soluble nutrient that is a prohormone (a precursor substance to a ). is fortified with it, but it does not come in most other like cheese, , and ice cream, and it occurs in significant levels naturally in only a few foods like fatty and oils. To fulfill the recommended daily with alone may take as much as 6 to 8 glasses, far more than most people drink, and so most people get the majority of their from . But wearing significantly impairs the ’s ability to activate — wearing SPF 8 can reduce the ’s ability to produce by about 95 percent.

Until recently, nobody thought much about whether they got enough from drinking or other foods or from the . But getting the so-called “sunshine ” does matter because it plays a far more complex role in our than anyone could have imagined just a decade or two ago.

Of course scientists have known for a long time that is important to keeping . signals the to absorb from and so maintains normal blood levels. When there isn’t enough , the doesn’t absorb enough from the diet, and it instead removes from stores in the , making them weak or brittle. diseases linked to deficiency include: rickets, the -deforming and potentially fatal that afflicted children for ages; osteomalacia, a -weakening, -softening form of rickets that occurs in adults; and , the brittle .

’s role in was pretty much the limit of scientific understanding back in the early 1990s when I met Michael F. Holick, professor of medicine, physiology, and biophysics at Boston University School of Medicine. The endocrinologist and specialist met me in his office and told me about the discovery of during the industrial , when smoggy skies blocked the ’s rays from people’s and led to an epidemic of rickets. Rickets mostly disappeared once doctors started prescribing and sunshine, and especially once governments mandated that be fortified with in the 1930s. It doesn’t take much to prevent rickets.

In between talking about , Holick talked about his schooling in , about ice skating with his wife on their first date, about his adventures in industry developing a -based psoriasis lotion, and about the glorious view of Boston from his office window. He introduced me to patients in his clinic that had disorders like . And he explained how rickets was now mostly confined to family pets like his own family’s iguana. Holick cured his captive reptile by serving it cream cheese and lettuce sandwiches, and by shining a lamp into the cage.

I was taken with this charismatic, energetic scientist. For a while I even tried to sell magazines an on how to save pet iguanas from rickets. I was, not surprisingly, unsuccessful. But given time, a far larger and richer story about has emerged, and much of it has come out of Holick’s office.

For one thing, rickets never really went away. Soon after our meeting, medical journals started reporting on cases diagnosed among children living in northern cities, as well as on a rise in cases of its adult form, osteomalacia. Scientists started to wonder if deficiency was more common than they thought. A research in Baltimore found that more than of homebound adults over the of 65 were severely deficient.

To get sense of the scope of deficiency in the wider community, Holick and colleagues measured levels in younger people living in Boston. They found that it was surprisingly common. About 36 pecent of young adult city dwellers that worked office jobs were deficient at the end of winter, and 11 percent were so at the end of summer. The emerging research also indicated that people with darker were more likely to be deficient than people with lighter , because they needed more time in the to convert into an active . Also, people who were overweight were more likely to be deficient, a result of the becoming harder for the to access from fat cells.

Suddenly, people again started paying attention to long-taken-for-granted . Holick and others declared that the country was in the middle of a silent epidemic of -deficiency, and warned that the effects could be subtle but far-reaching. To combat the epidemic, Holick came out in 2004 with a book called The UV Advantage, which recommends of 15 to 20 minutes a while de-emphasizing concerns. Some of his colleagues recoiled from his advice, feeling that people would take it as permission to sunbathe. After it also came to light that Holick received funding from the Indoor Tanning Association, he was forced to resign from the dermatology department at Boston University Medical School. (He still holds other positions there.)

Holick defended himself, saying his situation was no different than other doctors taking pharmaceutical money, and pursued his studies. Today he is still considered a leading expert in demystifying . Building on what is now more than 30 years of research, last he published a capstone review in the New England Journal of Medicine that delineated just how important is to the healthy — and how many people need more of it.

Scientists now understand that most tissues and cells in the have receptors, including several that possess the machinery to convert it to the active form in the . It is also now commonly believed that helps maintain and immune capability while also decreasing the for various chronic illnesses, including cardiovascular diseases, autoimmune diseases such as diabetes type 1 and multiple sclerosis, and various cancers including colon, ovarian, breast, and prostate. Among the evidence is the fact that the further away from the equator — and the — that people live, the greater their chance of developing some of these problems. (Some very northern cultures like the Inuit naturally compensate for the reduced with a diet rich in oil.)

The work is not without its doubters. A National Institute study based on survey data has found no relationship between levels and the overall of dying from based on a 10- follow-up, although it did find an association between decreased of colorectal death and higher levels. The findings are not completely clear because of the complex contributions to from total diet and lifestyle.

Large studies are also still needed to confirm the of the links between and chronic diseases. In recent years such studies of several other turned out to be disappointing for their role in improving . But remember, is not a classic , and so these studies may not be relevant.

Only time and additional studies will elucidate further whether we should be paying more attention to . Maybe eventually it will become clearer whether we should be worrying less about and more about whether our is soaking up enough rays to fulfill our sunshine quota.

In the meantime, I wonder if Holick still has that iguana — they can live for 20 to 30 years — and whether it really beat rickets for good. • 19 March 2008

SOURCES: “ deficiency in homebound elderly persons.” Gloth FM 3rd, Gundberg CM, Hollis BW, et al. JAMA. 1995;274:1683-6. “ insufficiency among free-living healthy young adults.” Tangpricha V, Pearce EN, Chen TC, & Holick MF. Am J Med. 2002;112:659-62. “ Deficiency.” Holick MF. N Engl J Med 357; 266-81. Prospective Study of Serum and Mortality in the United States, Freedman DM, Looker AC, Chang S-C, & Graubard BI, J Natl Inst 2007; 99:1594-1602

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Vitamin D Beneficial for Bone Health, MS, Cancer and Winter Depression

It sounds too good to be true… a little inexpensive pill that could block the development of some cancers, strengthen , prevent multiple sclerosis and alleviate winter depression.

But it’s not science fiction. The “new aspirin” could be . Just as we discovered that aspirin can guard against heart , could become a useful weapon in the fight against MS, , mild depression and one of the most devastating diseases of our time – .

“As time has gone by, has raised its head as a sort of ambrosia for cancers,” says Dr. Louise Parker, an and a world expert in the environmental exposures that can lead to . Or, in the case of , the of exposure.

“One of the most important sources of is from the and through your ,” says Dr. Parker.

“Many parts of Canada don’t get much in the winter. We’ve also been telling people to cover up and use to prevent . actually impairs your (’s ability) to make .”

So the Canadian Society recommends that during the winter, Canadians take at least 1,000 units a of , dubbed “the sunshine .”

Dr. Parker says 1,000 units a is well beyond what you can obtain from your diet. is a bit of a rare , appearing only in fatty , and . Even if you were to sunbathe in southern climates, you would not take in 1,000 units.

“If you were to lie naked on a beach in the Bahamas, and I don’t recommend that because of , you cannot get up to the equivalent of 1,000 units of a ,” says Dr. Parker.

She notes as a factor is turning up in study after study. It turns out people with lung and colon are deficient. And it helps the absorb . In a study examining whether women who took had a lower of , it was found the women taking had stronger than those who did not take the . Years later, researchers went back to that study and found that the women who took also had fewer cancers.

But before becomes the “new aspirin,” more research needs to be carried out.

works in very complicated ways, she says. It changes the way cells work. In fact, there is medical speculation that it may block cell proliferation or improve immune system functions. But its role is not fully understood.

Lifestyle also has to be part of the equation. Dr. Parker is looking at how obesity, which we know can cause , and , which we know prevents , could interact with . “At the population level, I am trying to understand how all these things fit together,” says Dr. Parker. “It’s very complex.” Dr. Parker describes it as looking for a piece of a jigsaw puzzle. “We know some of the jigsaw pieces, but not all,” she says.

Meanwhile, there is very little evidence that taking can harm you. Perhaps in huge doses it could cause kidney stones, but that has not been proven.

“On the average, 1,000 units a is safe and is probably effective in reducing the of colon , and maybe other cancers as well,” says Dr. Parker.

So does she take and recommend it? Absolutely. “I take 1,000 units of – one on and one off,” she says.

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Dalhousie University via (http://www.newswise.com)

Dalhousie University (2008, 16). A Of Sunshine In The Fight Against :

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Making healthy bones a priority

It wasn’t too long ago that fractures were considered an inevitable part of aging.

Research strides in the past 15 years, however, have revealed diseases such as not only can be diagnosed early and treated to reduce but can be prevented altogether in most individuals, according to the 2004 Surgeon General’s on and . Continue Reading…

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Men As Well As Women Need Bone Tests

WASHINGTON (AP) — tests aren’t just for women anymore. New guidelines are calling for older to get a routine check for -thinning . Continue Reading…

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National Osteoporosis Foundation Issues Guidelines for Osteoporosis Management

25, 2008 — On 21, the National Foundation (NOF) issued guidelines intended as a reference for clinicians in diagnosing and treating in 50 years and older and in women. A recent study in the 22 issue of International also highlights the use of the World Organization (WHO) . Continue Reading…

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Could dairy state be vitamin D deficient?

MADISON —A person’s ability to fight , build and prevent broken may all hinge on how much the receives and produces. But new research published in the Medical Journal (Volume 106, No. 8) finds residents of the dairy state are deficient. Continue Reading…

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Calcium gluconate

supplements are usually only required where dietary is deficient. This dietary requirement varies with and is relatively greater in childhood, and lactation due to an increased demand, and in old , due to impaired absorption. Continue Reading…

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FIRST AND ONLY OSTEOPOROSIS TREATMENT PACK COMBINING A BISPHOSPHONATE (Actonel 35 mg) WITH CALCIUM AND VITAMIN D LAUNCHED TODAY TO HELP IMPROVE PATIENT COMPLIANCE

Actonel Combi*, a new convenient option designed to help patients take their supplementation regularly and correctly , is launched today. Actonel Combi combines the dosing of a once weekly bisphosphonate (Actonel 35mg [risedronate]) with (880 International Units) and the recommended daily dose of (1000mg) in a single pack for the same Tariff price as Actonel 35mg. Continue Reading…

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Three Steps To Stronger Bones

“We continuously add , up until the early adult years,” says Neil Gonter, assistant professor of clinical medicine at Columbia University and a rheumatologist in private practice in New Jersey. “And then it stabilizes for many years, until the menstrual cycle stops and we start to lose .” So protecting your most means getting an early start: Continue Reading…

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