Nutrition
Nutritional Research
Three New Reasons That You Need This Important Vitamin
Three New Reasons That You Need This Important Vitamin |
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By Geoffrey R. Harris, MD
Three new studies reveal how important a common vitamin is for improving chronic pain and actually prolonging our lives. Unfortunately, we aren’t getting enough. Read more to learn how easy it is to get the right amount of this important vitamin. Remember vitamin D? It’s the "sunshine vitamin" and we aren’t getting enough of it. Vitamin D used to be easy to get. Unfortunately, outside play, outdoor jobs, and weekends in the park are less and less common. Our modern lifestyles, that are more and more spent indoors, do not allow for the sun exposure that our skin needs to create vitamin D. Furthermore, sunscreen and glass block the important wavelengths of light that are used to create this crucial vitamin. New research from Jane Lukacs, Ph.D., from the University of Michigan, has found vitamin D deficiency to be increasingly prevalent, especially in African-American, Hispanic, Asian, and dark-skinned individuals. Like sunscreen, darker skin, which has higher amounts of pigment (melanin), blocks the important light wavelengths from getting to the skin to make vitamin D. Dr. Lukacs’ research also found that obesity is a risk factor for vitamin D deficiency. Being overweight seems to lead to deficiency because vitamin D is "fat soluble" and gets stuck in the fat so that it cannot get to where it needs to go. The most interesting part of their research is that the study was done in summer (not winter) when sunlight is the most abundant—a time when we don’t often worry about getting enough vitamin D. So, what makes vitamin D so important? It used to be that we thought vitamin D just helped strengthen bones by improving the body’s ability to absorb and use calcium. Recent research has shown that vitamin D also affects the immune system, muscles, blood pressure, and heart. Vitamin D deficiency has also been linked to the development of cancer, diabetes, fibromyalgia, high cholesterol, and multiple sclerosis. As our knowledge of vitamin D grows, so does our understanding of its importance in our bodies. Dr. W. Michael Hooten of the Mayo clinic recently reported that vitamin D deficiency is associated with more severe chronic pain. In patients with chronic pain, individuals with vitamin D deficiency required significantly higher doses of narcotic pain medicine and required them longer than people who were not deficient in vitamin D. This research suggests that vitamin D has an effect on the relationship between nerves, muscles, and pain. Last, but not least, a study by Drs. Philippe Autier and Sara Gandini from the International Agency for Research on Cancer and the European Institute of Oncology, respectively, found that people who took a vitamin D supplement actually live longer. The average daily dose of vitamin D was 528 IU in the study, and people who took a vitamin D supplement lowered their risk of death, by any cause, by 7%. It was 8% lower if the supplement had been taken for at least three years. Unfortunately, the reason for this benefit is unclear at this time, but further research is ongoing. Regardless, this information is impressive and reminds us of how important vitamin D is to our health. My recommendations for vitamin D:
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By Geoffrey R. Harris, MD



