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The Vitamin D Newsletter

May, 2006

This is a periodic newsletter from the Vitamin D Council, a non-profit

trying to end the epidemic of vitamin D deficiency. If you don't want

to get the newsletter, please, please, please, hit reply and let me

know.

This newsletter is not copyrighted. Please reproduce it and post it

on Internet sites. Not yet signed up for the free newsletter? Click

on Vitamin D Newsletter and follow the directions. I will post this

newsletter as a PDF on the website.

This month we will start with a question from a reader in Chicago and

then see if the Vitamin D Conference just finished in ,

British Columbia, answered any of his questions.

Dear Dr. Cannell:

I have been following the research on Vitamin D for several years now

- ever since I learned of the connection between vitamin D and

multiple sclerosis (my father died from that disease.) I have also

been receiving your very interesting newsletter and review the

Cholecalciferol Council website frequently. My training is in

physics, biochemistry, and anthropology from Stanford, and have

several publications in chemistry, pharmacology, and laser physics so

I appreciate the scientific updates. I am currently 42 years old. I

had a few questions for you which I was hoping you might be able to

address. I also wanted to give you some anecdotal evidence of my own

experience with vitamin D, for what that's worth. I understand

whatever reply you might give to me does not constitute " medical

advice, " but just your opinion.

About a year ago, I started taking about 2000 units of cholecalciferol

a day (sometimes 4000 a day) - I noticed no significant differences in

my health either good or bad. This winter I received your update

about vitamin D and influenza. Not long after this, I came down with

the flu - a very bad case. I had read most of Heaney's articles on

Vitamin D, as well as Holick's and others', so I knew that the human

body can produce about 10,000 units a day in the summer sun in only

15-30 minutes, and had read all the statistics on Vitamin D overdose

and toxicity, so I figured that upping my intake to 10,000 units a day

for a few weeks might help me get over my terrible flu quicker, and

certainly couldn't hurt me. I did up my intake to that level (this

was about February 12th). It did not seem to speed up the recovery

from my cold. I was pretty sick for two-three weeks.

However, after the cold ended, I started to notice several good things

happening to my body. Things much improved. The first thing that I

noticed was that certain signs of inflammation that have been a

problem for me for many years went away. I have had major periodontal

disease for about 10 years, and nothing has helped very much. However

in about a month of taking 10,000 units a day of cholecalciferol, much

of my gum tissue healed significantly, stopped receding and became

significantly less painful. I was overjoyed! In addition to this, my

skin - which has often been red and inflamed (not psoriasis or

anything clinical, just very red) became much better - clear, smooth

and not red. The redness almost entirely disappeared! Five other

things improved noticeably as well. My sense of smell became, I would

estimate, 5 times as sensitive as it had been. I guess my sense of

smell was just average before - but now all of a sudden, I can smell

all kinds of subtle distinctions that I never could before. It is

EXTREMELY noticeable. In addition to this, my sense of balance

improved markedly and my guitar playing improved (I'm able to shift

cords faster). Additionally, I began to sleep much better. The

fourth thing I noticed was that my mood brightened noticeably - I was

just happier. Finally, (and this is a little embarrassing) my semen

quality and quantity went way up. Does vitamin D help semen?

As you can well imagine, I was overjoyed, feeling like I had found

some magic fountain of healing for many of my ailments. I felt like

an almost new person-the improvements to my life were NOT subtle!!

Then, my doctor told me 10,000 units a day was toxic. Immediately

after that, I started becoming nauseous every time I took vitamin D.

Could I be toxic?

Philip, Chicago.

Dear Philip:

If you are toxic from vitamin D, you are the first person in the world

to become toxic after taking 10,000 units a day for two months. That

said, you need to have a 25(OH)D and calcium blood test. I predict

your level will be about 80 ng/ml, well below the toxic range, and

your blood calcium to be normal. However, in my opinion, everyone

taking more than 2,000 units per day should have periodic 25(OH)D

levels until the government changes its Upper Limit. By the way,

unless you are fighting a life-threatening disease, there is just no

reason to regularly take more than 5,000 units a day, and then only in

the winter unless you assiduously avoid sunlight.

I'm not surprised that 10,000 units per day had no effect on the flu.

In my experience, one has to take 1,000 units per kilogram of body

weight for three days early in the course of the illness to have an

effect (that's 50,000 units a day for three days for a 110-pound

person, taken early in the course of the illness - just like

antivirals). As far as the other benefits you described, I have heard

them all, except for the improved sense of smell. You'll be

interested in what scientists reported in .

Conference

The Vitamin D Conference just finished in was nothing short

of spectacular. On the bus into , I met a representative from

the National Cancer Institute whose job was simple: her bosses at the

NIH wanted to know if they should fund the flood of grant requests

about vitamin D. Given the quality of the papers presented, I can't

imagine her answer was anything but yes.

Dr. Tony Norman and Dr. Bouillon, the conference organizers, had

to choose from over 300 submissions from scientists around the world.

The venerable Dr. Bouillon did not try to back off his recent widely

quoted warning that more than a billion people in the world are

vitamin D deficient. Both men did a great job balancing presentations

on vitamin D nutrition, vitamin D basic science, and the patentable

vitamin D analogs sought by drug companies. Of course, I thought more

time should have been devoted to vitamin D nutrition but Dr. Norman

pointed out that more time was devoted to vitamin D nutrition than

ever before. Like Dr. Norman, I am unable to comment on all the

presentations that merited it, or this newsletter would be 50 pages

long.

It was painful to hear the scientists use ten different names (and

interchangeably) for vitamin D, for 25-hydroxy-cholecalciferol, and

for 1,25- dihydroxy-cholecalciferol. Some even called ergocalciferol

vitamin D! Can you imagine scientists using the same name for

cholesterol, pregnenolone, testosterone, and estradiol? They do

exactly that with vitamin D. Editors of the major journals will not

accept reasonable names like " vitamin D " for cholecalciferol,

" calcidiol " for 25-hydroxy-cholecalciferol, and " calcitriol " for

1,25-dihydroxy-cholecalciferol. The presentations would have been

much smoother if scientists could get together and give vitamin D and

its metabolites common names like other steroid hormones.

Dr. Barbara Gilchrest, who fired Dr. Holick from one of his

professorships several years ago after Holick wrote a book saying God

knew what she was doing when she created sunlight, gave the Plenary

Lecture. Wisely, Dr. Gilchrest overwhelmed the audience with graphic

pictures of invasive skin cancer to support her argument that sunlight

is evil. Of course, it's harder to show pictures of invasive colon

cancer, breast cancer, prostate cancer, and the 15 other internal

cancers caused by sunlight deprivation.

However, Dr. Gilchrest is changing her mind. Bernard Shaw once

said, " Progress is impossible without change; and those who cannot

change their minds, cannot change anything. " Dr. Gilchrest is

changing her mind - not about the evils of sunlight - about vitamin D.

She is in the process of admitting that this miraculous substance has

benefits beyond bone.

Two years ago, she dismissed any concerns about vitamin D with a " take

a multivitamin if you are concerned. " Now she believes the Food and

Nutrition Board needs to consider raising both the Adequate Intake

recommendations (how much one should take every day) as well as the

Upper Level (the amount one can take on your own, without being under

a doctor's care, and without fear of toxicity). My compliments to Dr.

Gilchrest.

One of the most interesting things I learned in is that

scientists from England, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and the rest

of the world, do not understand the " American Decade Rule. " The rule

clearly states that if a U.S. scientist and a foreign scientist both

discover the same thing in the same decade, the American gets total

credit for it, even if the foreigner discovered it first.

Case in point: the discovery of the potent steroid hormone, activated

vitamin D or calcitriol, a discovery so important that it regularly

starts rumors of a Nobel Prize. Dr. Holick, Dr. Schnoes, and Dr.

DeLuca announced their discovery of calcitriol in April of 1971. A

group in England, led by Dr. Lawson and , published the same

discovery in Nature, in March of 1971, a month earlier. Members of

the same English group, Dr. Fraser and Dr. Kodicek, discovered the

kidneys make calcitriol in November of 1970, a full six months

earlier. However, both English discoveries were within a decade of

the Americans. Therefore, the " American Decade Rule " applies and the

Americans get total credit. I was surprised that scientists from the

Commonwealth find the rule so hard to understand.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1971 Apar(4):803-4.

Nature. 1971 Mar 26;230(5291):228-30.

Nature. 1970 Nov 21;228(5273):764-6.

Dr. Heike Bischoff-Ferrari did a wonderful job, not just presenting

her data that optimal vitamin D blood levels need to be at least 40

ng/ml, but for presenting Dr. Ed Giovannucci's data (who had to cancel

for personal reasons). Dr. Bischoff-Ferrari reminded us that

periodontal disease in inversely related to vitamin D blood levels.

She also reminded us that there is strong scientific evidence that

vitamin D improves neuromuscular performance in older people. She

didn't tackle the logical next question: will adequate levels of one

of the most potent steroid hormones in the body improve neuromuscular

performance in younger people, such as that need for optimal athletic

or musical performance? Philip, whose email to me is above, and other

readers of this newsletter have been telling me: yes, yes, yes.

Dr. Bischoff-Ferrari then presented Dr. Giovannucci's data that one

reduces your risk of all cancers about 17% for every 10 ng/ml of

vitamin D in your blood. For cancer of the digestive system, the risk

reduction is 43%. His data indicates all Americans should be taking

about 2,000 IU per day and some Americans need even more to minimize

cancer risk. No one know where the curve flattens out; that is, no

one knows how much further cancer reduction one gets from 20, 30, or

40 ng/ml incremental increases in blood levels.

The section on the enzymes that metabolize vitamin D reminded me how

much we don't know about vitamin D. Millions of Americans take

psychiatric and other medications that interfere with the same system

of enzymes (cytochrome P-450) that metabolize vitamin D. We've known

for a long time that some medications taken for epilepsy (Dilantin,

phenobarbital, Tegretol) reduce vitamin D blood levels. However,

which medications increase levels? I have seen a number of cases of

higher than expected levels in patients taking psychiatric medications

metabolized by cytochrome P-450 enzymes and some non-psychiatric

medications interfere with these same enzymes. This practical area of

clinical medicine needs more research.

Dr. Heaney presented by video hookup and made his quiet but

powerful case that about 75% of American women are vitamin D deficient

(levels less than 35 ng/ml), that about 3,000 units a day are needed

to bring 95 % of the population out of the deficient range, and that

10,000 units a day is the safe upper limit. (This does not mean you

should take 10,000 units per day, it means scientists should be able

to study 10,000 unit daily doses without the bureaucratic difficulty

they now encounter).

Dr. Kimball, working with Dr. Reinhold Vieth, presented data that

children (age 10 -17) only increased their average blood level by 11

ng/ml when given 14,000 units per week for eight weeks and that such

dosing was safe. Dr. Vieth is also trying to fill another need in

vitamin D clinical science. We need a trial of healthy volunteers

taking 20,000 units per day for two or three years. Do blood levels

stabilize with oral dosing as they do with sun exposure? Does skin

production produce other vitamin D compounds, like dihydrotachysterol,

which inhibits the production of calcitriol and thus protects against

vitamin D toxicity? Do other vitamin D variants made in the skin

induce the metabolism of vitamin D, lower levels, and protect against

toxicity?

J Biol Chem. 1972 Dec 10;247(23):7528-32.

Does 20,000 units a day for years have any ill effects? Does it

affect blood or urine calcium? One study from the 1980's showed

10,000 units a day caused loss in bone density but they used a vitamin

D analog (ergocalciferol) which is a xenobiotic (generally foreign to

the human body). Therefore, we still don't know what 20,000 units of

real vitamin D (cholecalciferol) would do if given for several years.

Dr. Bruce Hollis presented data that reminded us of two overlooked

facts: (1) techniques to measure vitamin D in the blood have

significant reliability problems, and (2) vitamin D is the only

steroid hormone system in the body in which substrate starvation is

the rule. That is, only the vitamin D steroid hormone system is

chronically short of the substance needed (vitamin D) to fully

activate the system. Dr. Reinhold Vieth discussed the second fact in

his chapter in Feldman's most recent, and invaluable, textbook:

Vitamin D.

Dr. Hollis presented evidence in that levels of at least 40

ng/ml are required to normalize the enzyme kinetics of vitamin D.

[When I say vitamin D blood levels, I'm referring to 25(OH)D levels;

Bruce is studying actual vitamin D levels (cholecalciferol) as well as

25(OH)D levels]. Dr. Hollis continues giving pregnant and lactating

South Carolina women about 4,000 to 6,000 units a day in an ongoing

study. We predict easier pregnancies and less depression in the moms

- lower prenatal and perinatal mortality, fewer birth defects, fewer

infections, less diabetes, less psychiatric illness, less asthma,

stronger bones, and higher IQs in the children.

Dr. Lips and Dr. Whiting presented upsetting evidence that

vitamin D deficiency is the rule in most of the world; one exception

is the Scandinavian countries were vitamin D levels are the highest in

Europe, probably due to their cod liver oil. Unfortunately, hip

fractures in these same countries are the highest in Europe, probably

from the excessive vitamin A in cod liver oil. Stay away from cod

liver oil.

Osteoporos Int. 1992 Nov;2(6):298-302.

Dr. Hathcock did a great job reviewing the evidence that doses below

10,000 units per day have never been shown to be toxic and that

10,000, not 2,000, units per day should be the Upper Limit. He, like

so many others, urged the Food and Nutrition Board to revise their

outdated recommendations. Moreover, I understand from knowledgeable

people at the conference that the Food and Nutrition Board is planning

to do just that. Yes!!!!!!

Dr. Dixon presented fascinating evidence that high vitamin D blood

levels prevent sunburn! Of course, it makes sense. When vitamin D

levels are low, the skin stays as white as it can to make as much

vitamin D as it can, just in case you ignore Dr. Gilchrest's advice.

When vitamin D levels are high, the skin rapidly tans to prevent

excessive vitamin D skin production. A number of people have emailed

me that observation: now that their levels are high, they tan very

quickly. I've noticed the same thing.

Dr. Marie Demay presented her basic science research that vitamin D is

involved in hair follicles. I loved her talk although she's a

scientist and I'm a psychiatrist so I didn't understand much of what

she said. However, I've always thought that vitamin D will really

take off once science shows it's involved in any of three things: sex,

athletic performance, or hair growth. In , we saw evidence

for neuromuscular (athletic) performance and hair growth. Two out of

three isn't bad; great job, Dr. Demay! In the way of full disclosure,

my semi-baldness has not improved on vitamin D, but it has stopped

getting worse.

Dr. Cedric Garland recounted how, 26 years ago, he and his brother

first thought about the relationship between vitamin D and colon

cancer. The brothers, together with colleague Ed Gorham, were the

first to provide epidemiological evidence that vitamin D deficiency is

involved in numerous cancers. Their seminal 1980 paper is going to be

reprinted, a well-deserved honor.

Int J Epidemiol. 1980 Sep;9(3):227-31.

Dr. Thadhani and his group from Harvard reviewed their recent

discovery that calcitriol and similar drugs increase survival in

patients with renal failure. He also presented evidence that renal

failure patients have profound deficiencies of both calcitriol and

vitamin D and their vitamin D deficiency is not corrected by giving

calcitriol or its analogs, which is the current practice.

Of course, Dr. Modlin stole the show when he reported on his

research just published in Science that vitamin D may be, in effect, a

powerful antibiotic. For the first time, the UCLA group showed that

when researchers add vitamin D to African American blood, their blood

makes more of the natural antibiotics that humans rely on the fight

infection. Dr. eau, from the Imperial College in London,

followed Modlin and showed vitamin D helped fight tuberculosis,

probably from increasing these same natural antibiotics. Science has

discovered more than 200 of these naturally occurring antimicrobial

peptides; they are especially prevalent in the upper and lower

respiratory tract; at least one inactivates the influenza virus.

Let's not forget that two other groups have also recently shown the

antibiotic potential of vitamin D.

Science. 2006 Mar 24;311(5768):1770-3.

J Immunol. 2004 Sep 1;173(5):2909-12.

FASEB J. 2005 Jul;19(9):1067-77.

J Virol. 1986 Dec;60(3):1068-74.

Two hundred and sixteen papers were relegated to poster presentations

and all 216 of these scientists thought they should have been chosen

to present, as did I. Of course, that would have meant a month-long

conference. I only have space to mention of few of the most

interesting. Dr. Lu presented evidence that the vitamin D content of

fish is much less than previously thought, including mackerel. Salmon

is OK but the vitamin D almost disappears when the salmon is fried.

Dr. Kimball presented a case series of 12 patients with multiple

sclerosis who are now on 40,000 units vitamin D a day with an average

blood level of 180 ng/ml (the highest is about 400 ng/ml) and they

have no evidence of toxicity or calcium disturbances!!! (Don't do

this on your own; they have a very serious illness, doses were

gradually increased, and the patients are being monitored closely.)

Dr. Hardin, from Columbia University, presented evidence that blood

levels above 50 ng/ml should help patients with lupus. A group from

the University of Manchester presented the mechanism by which vitamin

D should reduce arteriosclerosis. A group from the University of

Chicago presented evidence that vitamin D should not only prevent

colon cancer, but help treat it as well. Dr. Scragg of the

University of Auckland presented evidence that ethnic differences in

vitamin D levels explain a significant proportion of the reason

African Americans are more hypertensive than whites. The group from

San Diego presented evidence that vitamin D deficiency is intimately

involved in breast, colon, and ovarian cancer.

A group from the University of Manitoba presented evidence that

one-month-old infants tolerate 2,000 units of vitamin a day for three

months quite well without any evidence of adverse effects. A group

from Wake Forest University demonstrated that higher vitamin D levels

were associated with better neuromuscular (athletic) performance in

older Americans (should help younger Americans too). A group from the

University of Amsterdam showed that the increased risk of falling from

vitamin D deficiency is much worse in people with a common genetic

variation of the vitamin D receptor. Dr. Chen presented evidence that

plain old vitamin D should prevent prostate cancer.

Dr. Barsony, of town University, presented evidence that low

blood sodium is a risk factor for vitamin D deficiency and that such

deficiencies may not be able to be corrected until the low blood

sodium is corrected. Dr. Barsony really thought outside the box to

discover this potentially very important clinical finding. Dr. Godar

presented evidence that young Americans, not just older Americans, are

not getting much vitamin D from sunlight. Dr. showed evidence

that a significant number of young children have a previously

undetected form of vitamin D in their blood. (Sunlight triggers the

creation of a number of different versions of vitamin D in the skin,

that's why it's risky to avoid the sun and only depend on oral vitamin

D.) Dr. Patel and a group from the University of Manchester

announced evidence that vitamin D deficiency may be involved in

inflammatory polyarthritis.

Dr. Grant was involved in six presentations; the most interesting was

his replication of a 1937 finding that squamous cell skin cancer

reduces one's risk for a number of internal cancers. That's why I

used to be so happy when my dermatologist found a squamous cell cancer

on my skin. However, now that I maintain my level at about 60 ng/ml,

he hasn't been able to find any new ones.

Peller S, son CS. Skin irritation and cancer in the United

states Navy. Am J Med Sci: 1937;194:326-333.

Dr. Bulmer and his group from the Royal Infirmatory produced

evidence that vitamin D may play a role in allowing fertilized ova to

implant in the uterus and thus enhance fertility. Dr. Reichrath

presented evidence that transplant recipients are at a high risk for

vitamin D deficiency and that 50,000 units once a month may be the

most practical way of ensuring sufficiency. Dr. Selby from the

University of Manchester found the same problem in patients with

chronic pancreatitis. A group from the University of Tennessee found

the same problem in African Americans with heart failure. A group

from Norway confirmed that cancer patients do better if they are

diagnosed when vitamin D levels are the highest.

Finally, the Australian group headed by Dr. Darryl Eyles and Dr.

McGrath continue to present their convincing evidence (confirmed at

this meeting by Dr. Abreu and a group from France) that profound

maternal vitamin D deficiency in mammals causes permanent brain damage

in their offspring. The racial implication of their work is

overwhelming because most of the women in the USA who are profoundly

deficient are African American. Are African Americans more likely to

be born brain damaged than whites? Would pennies worth of vitamin D

improve the disparate prenatal, perinatal, and postnatal outcome in

African Americans? The sad fact is that McGrath's and Eyles' work

will continue to be ignored because our society has no way to

rationally discuss, assimilate, or act on such racially charged

scientific discoveries.

So, Philip, to answer your question, I don't think you are vitamin D

toxic. Your physician just hasn't been keeping up with the

literature. When he told you that you might be toxic your mind took

over and caused the nausea - much like it does when you eat a

contaminated hamburger, get food poisoning, become violently ill, and

then become nauseous at the sight of a perfectly good hamburger for

the rest of your life. That's my psychiatric explanation (which makes

sense from an evolutionary viewpoint as well). Nevertheless, you

should ask your doctor for a 25(OH)D level.

As far as your semen question, you are really asking if a powerful

steroid hormone could have an effect on male ejaculation. Actually

two other men have reported the same thing to me in emails. If so,

it's the seminal discovery about vitamin D. Most men could care less

about vitamin D preventing cancer, heart disease, arthritis, or fetal

brain damage. However, if it increases the volume of their semen . .

.. .

Cannell, MD

The Vitamin D Council

9100 San Gregorio Road

Atascadero, CA 93422

This is a periodic newsletter from the Vitamin D Council, a non-profit

trying to end the epidemic of vitamin D deficiency. If you don't want

to get the newsletter, please hit reply and let us know.

This newsletter is not copyrighted. Please reproduce it and post it

on Internet sites.

Not signed up for the newsletter yet: Vitamin D Newsletter sign-up page

Remember, we are a non-profit and rely on donations to publish our

newsletter and maintain our website. Send your tax-deductible

contributions to:

The Vitamin D Council

9100 San Gregorio Road

Atascadero, CA 93422

--

Sincerely,

Kalman MS, RD

If your dog is fat, you aren't getting enough exercise.

-Unknown

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