Guest guest Posted July 7, 2005 Report Share Posted July 7, 2005 Dura - I have tried to make this point, which is documented by Lemire, here on this board about a dozen times. It just seems to bounce off. This enzyme that converts 1,25-D back into it's inactive precursor allows a body to have a lot of the stuff at inflammation sites, while the endocrine or serum level remains well-regulated. In Sarcoidosis, Lemire says, that fails. It's a double-whammy, because those folks ARE generating a crapload of 1,25-D to try to contain those granulomas, and when that becomes a losing battle, a lot of it is left unutilized. But that would not become harmful, if the body were able to convert it back into the precursor. In some Sarcoidosis patients, at least, it cannot, and so the local spills into the serum level and hypercalcemia ensues. Why the enzyme fails to be generated in adequate amounts is an intersting question. Is this a genetic defect related to VDR? It could well be, such have been documented, and it's worth asking if there are other diseases like Sarc that have them. But the fact that the intolerance only shows up in the sickest Sarc patients makes me skeptical that this is really the issue. Sarc inflammation in severe cases is compared to leprosy - it's that out of control. If the body is trying to generate enough D to moderate that intense an inflammatory response, it's almost like an RA patient mainlining pharmaceutical D3 - could well stop the joint inflammation, but it'll be hard to enjoy that while your puking your guts out and getting calcium deposits here there and everywhere and otherwise feeling like dog poo. The rest of this is not in response to Dura, part commentary on MP, part warm welcome to Pippet. If there was evidence of D-induced hypercalcemia in Lyme, CFS, FM, RA, MS, or any of the other diseases the MP purports to treat, it would be good for all of us to know that. I however spent months looking for such evidence and found none, and instead noted studies that at least two of the diseases I just mentioned have studies showing significant improvements with D supplementation. So does TB, interestingly enough. That doesn't prove there aren't non-Sarc patients who share this problem, it just proves that the claim that this is a ubiquitous condition among all patients with the diseases I mentioned is badly at odds with the published data. I personally know of at least one patient with each of the above- mentioned diseases who not only tolerates D well but reports incremental improvements with regular D supplementation. But I don't think we have enough data to make conclusions about what type of improvements or exacerbations can result in these various diagnostic groupings. All data for MS and RA are encouraging, but we're talking about a modest number of human studies, extending and confirming more numerous observations from animal models. " Fatiguing illnesses " is such a weirdly broad category - there are very few illnesses that fill one with energy and vigor. It only seems descriptive when applied to diseases where no other symptoms than fatigue are notable. Very few of the patients I know, including those dx'd with CFS, fit that description. Symptoms vary in type, severity, etc, within and between the diagnoses. I think with the MP there was a gross over-estimation of the deeper, less superficial similarities, and not just on the part of it's creators, but those who helped push it from sarcinfo.com with its more appropriate focus to this much larger population of chronically ill folk. So it's very encouraging to hear from Pippet, talking so thoughtfully about the tricky business of identifying real commonalities and differences. Welcome, Pippet - I wish you'd been here when I was well enough to be actively researching, but there's a lot in the archive site Ken made for us to show you I really did apply myself to these 1,25-D questions. Almost bizarrely so, since it hasn't seemed to have much direct bearing on my own illness. Five months of experimental D-deprivation accompanied a big escalation in symptoms, but my symptoms have been escalating for three years now. I'm pretty sure (different than certain) D supplementation produces a small but noticable decrease in one type of pain, and when I initiated it and later raised the dose I got some progress towards a normal body temp (I run 2 - 2.5 degrees lower than before I was ill). There are more observations, but they're so tentative it seems less than responsible to publicize them. Pippet, I hope you'll keep posting here. It's lovely to see those abstracts! And I bet you have a lot to teach us about Sarcoidosis. I think its more unique than the mp site acknowledges, but what we learn about the body in one chronic inflammatory state is bound, at least in part, to improve our understanding of others. Plus, Sarc's such an exemplary case of a devastating disease where origins have been under-investigated, pathogenesis sloppily characterized, treatment poorly conceived, and infectious origin prematurely discounted, a person who's been through what I have can't help but feel a heart connection to its sufferers. I have a lot of questions which you may be able to help with. One concerns the accumulated evidence for an infectious origin in Sarc, and what researchers who pursue this have to say about the nature of the pathogen. I've read things which characterize Sarc as a genetically determined, over-aggressive response to innocous pathogens. Is that more laziness, do you think? I don't have a clue what the evidence we have about it amounts to. > > > As I start to take a gander at this literature, one (quick) question > > comes to mind: If > > > 1,25D is over-regulated by macrophages (e.g., not the usual 25D-> > > 1,25D kidney > > > stuff), that WOULDN'T per se require a concommitant drop in 25D > > (the " using it up " > > > hypothesis). Thus, 1,25D dysregulation from inflammation would exist > > independent > > > of any 25D deficiency. In contrast, LOW 25D and HIGH 1,25D would > > implicate a > > > deficiency vs a immune dysregulation, no? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 7, 2005 Report Share Posted July 7, 2005 Sorry I missed it . I just asked the question since I was just starting to learn about this issue and didn't check back through prior posts. But thanks for confirming my intuitions -- really, all chemicals are the same in the body in terms the mechanisms by which they are modulated & regulated. However, I hadn't (recently) seen that particular piece of the puzzle mentioned... sorry again for the required repetition. > > > > As I start to take a gander at this literature, one (quick) > question > > > comes to mind: If > > > > 1,25D is over-regulated by macrophages (e.g., not the usual > 25D-> > > > 1,25D kidney > > > > stuff), that WOULDN'T per se require a concommitant drop in > 25D > > > (the " using it up " > > > > hypothesis). Thus, 1,25D dysregulation from inflammation > would exist > > > independent > > > > of any 25D deficiency. In contrast, LOW 25D and HIGH 1,25D > would > > > implicate a > > > > deficiency vs a immune dysregulation, no? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 8, 2005 Report Share Posted July 8, 2005 Dura wrote in part: " sorry again for the required repetition. " My turn to be sorry - I was't annoyed, and you weren't even here as far as I know back when I was posting that slew of studies, papers and reviews on 1,25-D issues. I was just noting, more in a comic mood (which I obviously failed to convey) the way in which certain things fail to register. I am only one link in the I & I " D-train " - before I ever posted here on the subject, had already supplied abundant evidence that the MP's claims on the subject were inversions of what people who've spent the last three decades studying the issues have found. I came along and delivered maybe two or three dozen of what seemed like the most relevant references. Ken went to town, and did a better job than I did of compiling the information in one place, using his own site. What I should have said to you, Dura, is congrats for finding an independent reference which mentions exactly the same thing I found in Lemire's discussion of Sarc. Just as I meant to congratulate Ken more heartily than I have on finding that last study, which does indeed show that too little 25-D can cause the active metabolite to rise (to bring down PTH), creating the type of " D ratio " that the mp site insists is proof positive of D-intolerance and Sarc-like disease. I can't tell you how frustrated I am with MYSELF for being too sick to go roaming through my nine hundred and one folders of papers and links to repost source material. If there was frustration in my post, with an edge to it, that would have been the source. > > > > > As I start to take a gander at this literature, one (quick) > > question > > > > comes to mind: If > > > > > 1,25D is over-regulated by macrophages (e.g., not the usual > > 25D-> > > > > 1,25D kidney > > > > > stuff), that WOULDN'T per se require a concommitant drop in > > 25D > > > > (the " using it up " > > > > > hypothesis). Thus, 1,25D dysregulation from inflammation > > would exist > > > > independent > > > > > of any 25D deficiency. In contrast, LOW 25D and HIGH 1,25D > > would > > > > implicate a > > > > > deficiency vs a immune dysregulation, no? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 8, 2005 Report Share Posted July 8, 2005 > This enzyme that converts 1,25-D back into it's inactive precursor > allows a body to have a lot of the stuff at inflammation sites, > while the endocrine or serum level remains well-regulated. The enzyme you're talking about is 24-hydroxylase. It doesn't exactly convert it back to it's precursor 25(OH)D3. It converts it to 1,24,25(OH)D3. (And while that metabolite is much less active than its precursor, it does have some activity, so it's not totally inactive.) > In Sarcoidosis, Lemire says, that fails. It's a double-whammy, > because those folks ARE generating a crapload of 1,25-D to try to > contain those granulomas, and when that becomes a losing battle, a > lot of it is left unutilized. But that would not become harmful, if > the body were able to convert it back into the precursor. > Sarcoidosis patients, at least, it cannot, and so the local spills > into the serum level and hypercalcemia ensues. > Why the enzyme fails to be generated in adequate amounts is an > intersting question. 24-hydroxylase (CYP24) activity is at the cellular level in tissues, mainly in the intestines and the kidneys. Thus, 1,25-D that is produced and present in other tissues, is not as easily subjected to that enzyme. > If there was evidence of D-induced hypercalcemia in Lyme, CFS, FM, > RA, MS, or any of the other diseases the MP purports to treat, it > would be good for all of us to know that. I however spent months > looking for such evidence and found none. You should be looking for signs of hypercalciuria (increased urinary calcium), not hypercalcemia. For example, in Crohn's disease, one study has shown that 42% of patients have above normal vitamin D levels, but increased serum calcium and hypercalcemia was not present. See: Gut. 2004 Aug;53(8):1129-36. Measurement of vitamin D levels in inflammatory bowel disease patients reveals a subset of Crohn's disease patients with elevated 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D and low bone mineral density. On the other hand, in that study, hypercalciuria was found in Crohn's disease patients, and increased urinary calcium did correlate with increased serum vitamin D. The increased serum calcium and resulting hypercalcemia in sarcoidosis is likely due to the increased vitamin D levels combined with another factor that is not found in Crohn's disease , i.e. the increased ACE levels. In sarcoidosis, where elevated serum ACE occurs, serum calcium and hypercalcemia do coorelate with ACE levels. See: Eur Respir J. 1998 May;11(5):1015-20. Ionized calcium and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D concentration in serum of patients with sarcoidosis. This correlation is likely an effect which is unrelated to vitamin D, as a study on sarcoidosis did not show any significant coorelation between serum ACE and serum vitamin D. The relationship between ACE and hypercalcemia, could be due to a reduction of renal functioning, which commonly occurs in sarcoidosis. Decreased renal functioning does often coorelates with elevated ACE, and it could be the cause of reduced calcium excretion. However, FWIW, there is growing evidence that angiotensin II actually has it's own direct effects on calcium metabolism. Thus, this could also explain the correlation between serum ACE and hypercalcemia. See: Pediatr Nephrol. 2004 Jan;19(1):33-5. Angiotensin II reduces calcium uptake into bone. In any event, in Crohn's disease, serum ACE is rarely elevated (and actually often below normal), so that might explain why hypercalcemia only occasionally occurs in that disease, while it's commonly found in sarcoidosis. Mark Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 8, 2005 Report Share Posted July 8, 2005 Hi , I've been following your updates here and have been saddened by the tests results you'd been getting over the past few months, especially the brain atrophy. You have a bright mind and write beautifully and I don't want you to lose that. I see alot of similarities in some of the neurosarc patients, and neurolyme patients. I guess most new discoveries have a tendancy to over-correct or stylize their findings, not unique to the MP, but what I've found is that it's all par for the course, part of the learning process. As new pertinent information is discovered, that gets added to the pile, then integrated into the hypothesis as time reveals where to go from here. As I've always said, we won't know what will turn up in time as this approach becomes a longevity study, possibly in about 7-8 more years. Only time will tell. Long-term results will give us that answer. As with anything new, a shortage of data doesn't necessarily mean that the hypothesis misses the mark. I have been deeply looking into the Vitamin D topic (as well as other aspects of these diseases) and will continue to do that wherever I am for those who can no longer. It is particularly for these people whose disease continues to progress that I am committed to this process. I have been diagnosed with several autoimmune diseases in addition to Sarc (and know others who have been as well), so I think there is more cross-over than either we or scientists yet realize. Hang in there. There are alot of people out there working on it, Sincerely, Pippit > > > > As I start to take a gander at this literature, one (quick) > question > > > comes to mind: If > > > > 1,25D is over-regulated by macrophages (e.g., not the usual > 25D-> > > > 1,25D kidney > > > > stuff), that WOULDN'T per se require a concommitant drop in > 25D > > > (the " using it up " > > > > hypothesis). Thus, 1,25D dysregulation from inflammation > would exist > > > independent > > > > of any 25D deficiency. In contrast, LOW 25D and HIGH 1,25D > would > > > implicate a > > > > deficiency vs a immune dysregulation, no? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 9, 2005 Report Share Posted July 9, 2005 Just a reminder to Dura and Pippet, that all of the old research and posts about Vitamin-D are available at: There are dozens (if not hundreds) of good post with references there. http://cfsgroups.org/discussion/view_category.php?id=12 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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