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Vitamin D may help your
economic depression and decrease your financial aches and
pains this winter.
If you are
feeling some depression due to the economic downturn and are
experiencing the aches and pains of a shrinking portfolio, your
answer may lie in taking a vacation to the tropics or at least
increasing your intake of vitamin D.
No, it won't improve your
bottom line, but it could help you to feel dramatically better
while you suffer through the economic doldrums.
Did you know that those who
suffer from SAD are almost always vitamin D deficient and
that when vitamin D supplements are provided in winter, they
improve mood in only five days?[1]
Or were you aware that
75% of depressed patients (SAD patients in winter) reduce
their depression levels with the use of vitamin D?[2]
There
are at least two more recent papers showing that depression
is lifted by the use of vitamin D supplements.[3] [4]
In one
of them, 4,000 international units (IU) of vitamin D were
given to depressed patients during Canada's long winter.
The
result was a profound increase in blood vitamin D levels and
an even more dramatic increase in the subjects' sense of
wellbeing.4
In another investigation, researchers studied the
association between vitamin D levels and the risk of mood
disorders in the elderly.
The results were impressive.
Those
whose vitamin D levels were deficient-defined as less than
20 ng/ml-had 11.7 times the incidence of depression when
compared to those whose vitamin D levels were higher.
Usually an association is considered meaningful when a
measured factor correlates to a 50% increase or decrease.
In
this case, the correlation between vitamin D
deficiency and risk of mood disorders was a staggering 1,169
percent-a nearly 12 times increase in depression risk![5]
Elderly people seldom get in the sunlight and are
consequently depressed.
The elderly who have low levels of
vitamin D also are three-and-one-half times as likely to be
admitted to a nursing home as those who have higher
levels.[6]
It is criminal to let elderly persons die of
depression, fractures and all of the other maladies
correlated to their critically low vitamin D levels.
This
research is no secret, and someone needs to get the word out
to the elderly and to all others interested in better
health.
Now let's discuss pain:
Dr. Stewart Leavitt recently posted the results of a review
of 22 scientific studies on the relationship of vitamin D
deficiency to chronic pain. (http://Pain-Topics.org/VitaminD).
This 2008 analysis is just the latest of many studies on
vitamin D and pain, most of which have been ignored by the
physicians that treat the disorder.
In total, there were
3,670 patients with chronic pain, and 48% of them showed
significant vitamin D deficiency.
Vitamin D supplementation
was very helpful in alleviating the pain.[7]
Dr. Leavitt
states: "When supplementation was provided for improving
vitamin D status, pain and/or muscle weakness were resolved
or at least subsided in most cases, and there were
associated improvements in physical functioning."
Pain is common in winter, and it has been known for some
time that vitamin D or sunlight therapy is effective for its
alleviation.
For instance, In one interesting study,
conducted on chronic pain patients in Minneapolis, Minnesota
(45 degrees north latitude), it was found that 100% of
African Americans, American Indians, East Africans and
Hispanics were vitamin D deficient, as were most
Caucasians.[8]
In summer sunlight, dark-skinned people take
up to 6 times as long to produce the same amount of vitamin
D as light skinned people, making dark skinned people much
more susceptible to vitamin D deficiency.
Indoor lifestyles
and the advice to slather with sunscreen, which can reduce
vitamin D production during sunlight exposure by 99.5%[9]
puts dark-skinned people at a considerable vitamin D
deficiency disadvantage.
In addition, during the winter at
high latitudes in areas such as Minneapolis, there are
several months where little or no vitamin D is produced by
the skin due to the sun's position in the southern sky; that
is why vitamin D deficiency and it subsequent depression and
pain are so much more pronounced in winter.
It is absolutely
essential for dark-skinned adults to take vitamin D3
supplementation of 4,000 to 5,000 IU per day year around or
regularly use a tanning bed to stave off pain and to reduce
the excessive risk of cancer, hypertension, diabetes, etc.,
that plague them.
It is also critical for most Caucasians
during winter.
Remember that vitamin D3 is the only type of
vitamin D that should be used.
Another impressive result comes from a clinical observation
of five vitamin D-deficient patients who suffered from
myopathy, a disease of bone and muscle tissue.
They were
confined to wheelchairs and experienced severe fatigue,
weakness, and chronic pain.
After receiving 50,000 IU per
week of vitamin D, all regained enough strength and energy
within four to six weeks to be mobile and functional, and
their aches and pains disappeared.[10]
Other research
reported that five chronic-pain patients at John Hopkins
University Medical School were treated with vitamin D, and
their pain resolved within a week![11]
Vitamin D is a potent anti-inflammatory and also helps to
strengthen bone, joint and muscle tissue.
Be sure to
maintain optimal levels (50 ng/ml or 125 nmol/L) in order to
avoid the aches and pains of winter.
So there you have it.
Monetary woes this winter may increase
depression and cause financial pain, but there is no reason
to worsen the problem with severe physical pain and chemical
depression.
You have the answers before you.
A year of
vitamin D supplementation at 5,000 IU per day will cost you
about $10.00 at Bio-Tech Pharmacal, and that will not cause
you any additional financial pain or depression.
Their web
site:
http://www.bio-tech-pharm.com/catalog.aspx?cat_id=2.
By the way, I have no financial interest in that company and
simply recommend them as an exceptionally high quality,
low-price source of vitamin D3.
Lose the blues and be happy and well this winter!
[1] Lansdowne, A. et al. Vitamin D3 enhances mood in healthy
subjects during winter. Psychopharmacology 1998;135:319-23.
[2] Gloth, F. et al. Vitamin D vs. broad spectrum
phototherapy in the treatment of seasonal affective disorder
J Nutr Health Aging 1999; 3(1):5-7
[3] Jorde R. et al. Effects of vitamin D supplementation on
symptoms of depression in overweight and obese subjects:
randomized double-blind trial. J Intern Med 2008 Dec
1;264(6):599-609. Epub 2008 Sep 10.
[4] Vieth, R. et al. Randomized comparison of the effects of
the vitamin D3 adequate intake versus 100 mcg (4,000 IU) per
day on biochemical responses and the wellbeing of patients.
Nutr J 2004;3:8.
[5] Wilkins C. et al. Vitamin D Deficiency Is Associated
With Low Mood and Worse Cognitive Performance in Older
Adults. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry;2006;14:1032-1040).
[6] Visser, M. et al. Low serum vitamin concentrations of 25
hydroxyvitamin D in older persons and the risk of nursing
home admission. Am J Clin Nutr 2006;84:616-22.
[7] (http://Pain-Topics.org/VitaminD)
[8] Plotnikoff G. et al. Prevalence of severe
hypovitaminosis D in patients with persistent, nonspecific
musculoskeletal pain. Mayo Clin Proc. 2003;78:1463-70.
[9] Matsuoka, L. et al. sunscreens suppress cutaneous
vitamin D3 synthesis. J Clin Endocrinology & Metab 1987;
64:1165-68.
[10] Prabhala, A. et al. Severe myopathy associated with
vitamin D deficiency in western New York. Arch Intern Med
2000;160:1199-1203.
[11] Gloth, F. et al. Can vitamin D deficiency produce an
unusual pain syndrome? Arch Intern Med 1991;152:1662-4. |
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