As the winter approaches, aches and pains increase as
vitamin D levels, already too low in most people, begin to
plummet. Bringing vitamin D levels up can often alleviate or
eliminate the pain.
For instance, 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.
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."
This has actually been known for about 25 years, but because
it sells no drugs, it has been virtually ignored. Vitamin D
sufficient to keep optimal levels in the blood can be
purchased at Bio-Tech
Pharmacal for about $10.00 per year, and sunlight-the
most natural way to increase vitamin D, is free.
Unfortunately, sunlight produces vitamin D only during the
late spring through early fall in high latitudes.
The Powers of Darkness (the pharmaceutical/medical complex
that has succeeded in frightening most people out of the
sunlight) have created a shocking and widespread vitamin D
deficiency that is manifesting itself in increased rates of
cancer, heart disease, autism, diabetes and myriad other
maladies, not the least of which is chronic pain.
Other research has shown similarly impressive results. 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.[1] 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% [2]
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; the
UVB
portion of sunlight that stimulates vitamin D production is
filtered out by the atmosphere during those months. This is
known as "vitamin D winter" and is especially important in
the northern US, northern Europe and all of Canada. It is
absolutely essential for dark-skinned adults to take vitamin
D 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.
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. [3] 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! [4]
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.
[1]
Plotnikoff G.
et
al.
Prevalence of severe
hypovitaminosis D in patients with persistent,
nonspecific
musculoskeletal pain. Mayo
Clin
Proc. 2003;78:1463-70.
[2]
Matsuoka, L.
et
al.
sunscreens suppress cutaneous vitamin D3 synthesis. J
Clin Endocrinology &
Metab 1987; 64:1165-68.
[3]
Prabhala, A.
et
al.
Severe
myopathy associated with vitamin D deficiency in
western New York. Arch Intern Med
2000;160:1199-1203.
[4]
Gloth, F.
et
al.
Can vitamin D deficiency produce an unusual pain syndrome?
Arch Intern Med 1991;152:1662-4.