Supplement - ing With Vitamin D
Before I start, one of the most frequent questions I get
is "How can I help?" Besides making a donation
to the Vitamin D Council, another way to help is by going,
or getting your friends to go, to a series of talks that
Carole Baggerly of Grassroots
Health is giving around the country this summer. Grassroots
Health recently issued a Vitamin
D Scientist's Call to Action Statement signed
by some of the best known vitamin D scientists in the world.
You can access Carole's
itinerary here. If you can't go, call a friend
in the city she will be in and have them go in your place.
Carole is the one who recently talked the AMA into
their first position statement on vitamin D.
Chicago, June 17, 2008—The
American Medical Association (AMA), the nation's
largest physician organization, voted today at its Annual
Meeting to adopt the following new public health policy:
The current Reference Intake Values for Vitamin D were
established by the Food and Nutrition Board in 1997. Current
research suggests that the Upper Limits for adults is likely
overly conservative. Today the AMA called
on the FDA to
re-examine the current Daily Reference Intake Value
for Vitamin D in light of new scientific findings. "The
health benefits of Vitamin D are plentiful, such as strong
bones and a reduced risk of breast cancer and cardiovascular
disease," said AMA Board
Member Steven Stack, M.D. "It's time to take
a good look at the current daily recommended level of Vitamin
D and ensure that Americans know the appropriate levels
so they can reap the full health benefits."
The AMA's
statement is timely in light of another study published
a few days later that showed those with the lowest vitamin
D levels are twice as likely to die as those with the highest
levels. Dobnig
H, et al. Independent association of low
serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin
d levels with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Arch
Intern Med. 2008 Jun 23;168(12):1340–9.
Deborah Kotz, US News & World Report, wrote a great story about
it. Also, don't miss the Washington Post article that
just came out.
One thing you can do is get a group together and go to
one of Carole's talks. If you are unable to make
it but know someone in that city, get them to go with their
friends. If you know someone in the cities that do not
have venues, and the person you know may be able to arrange
a host for the meeting, email Carole at carole@grassrootshealth.org.
Vitamin D Q&A:
How much vitamin D should I take?
I don't know.
How often should I have a 25-hydroxy-vitamin
D blood test?
I don't know.
Because everyone's situation is either a lot, or
at least a little, different. How much vitamin D you need
varies with age, body weight, percent of body fat, latitude,
skin coloration, season of the year, use of sunblock, individual
variation in sun exposure, and—probably—how
ill you are. As a general rule, old people need more than
young people, big people need more that little people,
fat people need more than skinny people, northern people
need more than southern people, dark-skinned people
need more than fair skinned people, winter people need
more than summer people, sunblock lovers need more than
sunblock haters, sun-phobes need more than sun worshipers,
and ill people may need more than well people.
Regular readers should understand the reasons behind all
these statements except for the last one. However, don't
feel bad, no one understands it. Vitamin D is used by the
body—metabolically cleared—both to maintain
wellness and to treat disease. If you get an infection,
how much vitamin D does your body use up fighting the infection? Nobody
knows. If you have cancer, how much vitamin D does your
body use up fighting the cancer? Nobody knows. If
you have heart disease, how much vitamin D does your body
use up fighting the heart disease? Nobody knows.
If you are a child with autism, how much vitamin D does
your brain need to turn on the genes that autism has turned
off? Nobody knows. If you are an athlete, how much
vitamin D does your body use up making you stronger and
quicker? Nobody knows, etc.
This is what I'd do. If you live in Florida and
sunbathe once a week, year around, do nothing. If you use
suntan parlors once a week, do nothing. However, if you
have little UVB exposure,
my advice is as follows. Well children under the age of
two should take 1,000 IU per
day, over the age of two, 2,000 IU per
day. Well adults and adolescent between 80 pounds and 130
pounds should start with 3,000 IU per
day, over 130 pounds but less than 170 pounds, 4,000 IU per
day and over 170 pounds, 5,000 IU per
day. Two months later have your doctor order your first
25-hydroxy-vitamin D blood test. Yes, start
the vitamin D before you have the blood test. Then adjust
your dose so your 25(OH)D level is between 50 and 70 ng/ml,
summer and winter. These are conservative dosage recommendations.
Most people who avoid the sun—and virtually all dark-skinned
people—will have to increase their dose once they
find their blood level is still low, even after two months
of the above dosage, especially in the winter.
One more thing. Everyone has different vitamin D machinery.
For example, regular run-of-the-mill
rickets does not require much vitamin D to be cured. However,
two other forms of rickets, both rare, one caused by a
defective vitamin D receptor and the other by a malfunction
of the enzyme that activates vitamin D, requires either
much more vitamin D or activated vitamin D (calcitriol)
itself. It seems likely that there is as much variation
in the amount and functionality of the enzyme that activates
vitamin D as there is in the vitamin D receptor. Furthermore,
there are probably tissue variations as well. That is,
one vitamin D deficient child gets rickets, another autism,
another asthma, and yet another type 1 diabetes because
functionality of the vitamin D machinery is genetically
variable both between children and within children's
tissues. Therefore, some people, who have genetically determined
decreased functionality of the machinery in different tissues,
will need more vitamin D. How much more, we do not know.
However, should you have a child with autism, they will
usually need more than a normal child to overcome their
genetic defects. None of what I say in this paragraph is
proven, it is theoretical.
What blood test should I have?
The only blood test that can diagnose vitamin D deficiency
is a 25-hydroxy-vitamin D [25(OH)D]. Get your
levels above 50 ng/ml,
year around. Unfortunately, about 10–20% of
the doctors in the USA order the wrong test. They order
a 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D, thinking that by
measuring the most potent steroid in the system, they are
getting useful information. They are not. 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin
D is an adaptive hormone; it goes up and down with calcium
intake. Furthermore, as 25(OH)D is a weak steroid, when
25(OH)D levels are low, the body compensates by increasing
the amount of the potent steroid, 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin
D. Thus, a common cause of high 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin
D is low 25(OH)D or vitamin D deficiency. So these doctors
see the 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D is normal
or high and tell their patients that they are OK when they
are vitamin D deficient, advice that may prove fatal. Furthermore,
the reference labs in this country know this is occurring
but, to date, have not taken steps to educate the doctors
ordering the test because the reference labs make more
money off a 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D than they
do from a 25-hydroxy-vitamin D. Although the
misdiagnosis of vitamin D deficiency may prove fatal, the
doctors, and the reference labs, are ordering and processing
the wrong test.
Does it matter what reference lab my
doctor uses?
Yes, it might make a huge difference. A number of methods
exist to measure 25(OH)D in commercial labs. The two most
common are mass spectrometry and a chemiluminescence method, Liaison.
The first, mass spectrometry, is highly accurate in the
hands of experienced technicians given enough time to do
the test properly. However, in the hands of a normally
trained technician at a commercial reference lab overwhelmed
with 25(OH)D tests, it may give falsely elevated readings,
that is, it tells you are OK when in fact you are vitamin
D deficient. The second method, Liaison,
was recently developed and is the most accurate of the
screening, high throughput, methods; LabCorp uses it. Quest
Diagnostics reference lab uses mass spec. Again, both Quest
and LabCorp are overwhelmed by 25(OH)D requests. The problem
is that the faster the technicians do the mass spec test,
the more inaccurate it is likely to be. If your 25(OH)D
blood test says "Quest Diagnostics" on the top,
do not believe you have an adequate level (> 50 ng/ml).
You may or may not; the test may be falsely elevated. Let
me give you an example. A doctor at my hospital had Quest
Diagnostics do a 25(OH)D. It came back as 99 ng/ml of
ergocalciferol. He is not taking ergocalciferol (D2), he
has never taken ergocalciferol, only cholecalciferol, and
he is not taking enough to get a level of 99 ng/ml,
50 ng/ml at
the most. His email to Dr. Brett Holmquist at Quest about
why Quest Diagnostics identified a substance he was not
taking went unanswered other than to say "any friend
of Dr. Cannell's is a friend of ours."
Long story short: if your lab report says "LabCorp" on
the top, it is probably accurate; if it says Quest Diagnostic,
it may be falsely elevated. While LabCorp has also been
overwhelmed with 25(OH)D requests, the Liaison method
they use is relatively easy to do and does not rely on
technician skill as much as the mass spec methods do. I'm
not saying this because I'm a consultant for DiaSorin,
who makes Liaison, I'm
saying it because it is true. If you don't believe
me, get Quest to make me an offer to be their consultant
at 10 times what DiaSorin is supposed to be paying me ($10,000
per year) and see how fast I turn Quest down. If Quest
fixes their test, I'd love to consult. The ironic
thing: I've made both Quest and LabCorp lots of money
via this newsletter, the website, and by repeatedly telling
the press that people need to know their 25(OH)D level,
which has contributed to the skyrocketing sales of 25(OH)D
blood tests.
Here you can help. Find out which labs in your town use
Quest Diagnostics and which use LabCorp. Have a 25(OH)D
test at both labs the same day (you will have to pay for
them yourself). Then send both results to the Vitamin D
Council address below. If Quest Diagnostics does not fix
their 25(OH)D test, the Vitamin D Council will fix it for
them.
Where should I get my vitamin D supplements?
Anywhere. Vitamin D in 1,000 IU tablets
by Nature
Made are available in most pharmacies in the USA and
Canada. On the internet, Bio
Tech Pharmacal has prices that are hard to beat and
has 1,000 and 5,000 IU capsules. Life
Extension Foundation also has 1,000 and 5,000 IU capsules.
Capsules are important as it is easy dissolve the powder
inside the capsule in juice for children. In Canada, Ddrops are
now available, with 1,000 IU per
drop. Ddrops will soon be available in the USA from Carlson,
with 400, 1,000 or 2,000 IU per
drop! Unfortunately, Carlson keeps selling products with
toxic amounts of vitamin A. LifeSpan
Nutrition has a variety of vitamin D preparations including
their new "30 minutes of sunshine," which has
magnesium together with 5,000 IU of
vitamin D. If you don't eat a lot of vegetables,
you are probably magnesium deficient. Both Bio Tech Pharmacal
and LifeSpan Nutrition support the Vitamin D Council so
consider getting your vitamin D from them. In fact, LifeSpan
Nutrition began supporting us five years ago and is responsible,
in large part, for our website being what it is.
My doctor prescribed Drisdol, 50,000 IU per
week. What is it?
Drisdol is a prescription of 50,000 IU tablets
of ergocalciferol or D2. Ergocalciferol is not vitamin
D but it is similar. It is made by irradiating ergosterol,
which is found in many living things, such as yeast. D2
is not normally found in humans and most studies show it
does not raise 25(OH)D levels as well as human vitamin
D (cholecalciferol or D3) does. However, Drisdol is a lot
better than nothing. The best thing to do, if you are vitamin
D deficient (and human) is to take human vitamin D—cholecalciferol
vitamin D3.
Why are you against cod liver oil?
Cod liver oil contains toxic amounts of vitamin A. Vitamin
A antagonizes the action of vitamin D. Stay tuned to the
press. In several months you will see a clear warning by
numerous experts not to take vitamin A or cod liver oil.
What is the ideal level of 25(OH)D?
We don't know. However, thanks to Bruce Hollis,
Robert Heaney, Neil Binkley, and others, we now know the
minimal acceptable level. It is 50 ng/ml.
In a recent study, Heaney et al enlarged on Bruce Hollis's
seminal work by analyzing five studies in which both the
parent compound, cholecalciferol, and 25(OH)D levels were
measured. It turn out that the body does not reliably begin
storing the parent compound (cholecalciferol) in fat and
muscle tissue until 25(OH)D levels get above 50 ng/ml.
The average person starts to store cholecalciferol at 40 ng/ml,
but at 50 ng/ml,
virtually everyone begins to store it for future use. That
is, at levels below 50 ng/ml,
the body is usually using up the vitamin D as fast as you
make it or take it, indicating chronic substrate starvation,
not a good thing. Hollis
BW, Wagner CL, Drezner MK, Binkley NC. Circulating
vitamin D3 and 25-hydroxyvitamin D in humans: An
important tool to define adequate nutritional vitamin D
status. J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2007 Mar;103(3–5):631–4. Heaney
RP, Armas LA, Shary JR, Bell NH, Binkley N, Hollis BW. 25-Hydroxylation
of vitamin D3: relation to circulating vitamin D3
under various input conditions. Am J Clin Nutr.
2008 Jun;87(6):1738–42.
I have advanced renal failure and I'm
on dialysis, how much vitamin D should I take?
The same as everyone else. Since I have told you about
commercial labs ripping you off, let's add some drug
companies. Patients with advanced renal failure need activated
vitamin D or one of its analogs, available by prescription.
This is very important as their kidneys cannot make enough
1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D (calcitriol) to maintain
serum calcium. However, the rest of their tissues activate
vitamin D just fine and when those tissues get enough,
and when the kidneys get more vitamin D, the calcitriol
spills out into the blood, lowering their need for prescription
calcitriol or one of its analogs. The companies that make
the analogs don't like that, it means reduced sales.
So these companies do nothing, the scientists behind these
companies say nothing, and renal failure patients die prematurely
from one of the vitamin D deficiency diseases. Vieth
R. Vitamin D toxicity, policy, and science. J
Bone Miner Res. 2007 Dec;22 Suppl 2:V64–8.
When I asked my doctor for a 25(OH)D
blood test, he just laughed and said it was all idiotic.
What can I do?
Help me unleash the dogs of war, the plaintiff attorneys.
If you read about past nutritional epidemics caused by
society, such as beriberi or pellagra, you will realize
that education alone will take decades. Physicians successfully
fought against the idea that thiamine deficiency from milling
rice caused beriberi for almost a century. However, things
are different now. The agents of change in modern America,
as obnoxious as they are, are plaintiff attorneys. Once
the first malpractice lawsuits claiming undiagnosed and
untreated vitamin D deficiency led to breast cancer, autism,
heart disease, etc., get past summary judgment, and they
will, and end up in front of a jury, and they will, things
will change rapidly. One of the main reason physicians
do what they do is fear of lawsuits. In a matter of months,
arrogance and ignorance will give way to 25(OH)D tests
and vitamin D supplementation. Goodwin
JS, Tangum MR. Battling quackery: attitudes
about micronutrient supplements in American academic medicine. Arch
Intern Med. 1998 Nov 9;158(20):2187–91.
The vitamin D Council takes money from
Bio Tech Pharmacal and Lifespan Nutrition and now you
are a consultant for Diasorin. With those conflicts,
how can I believe what you say?
Believe what you want, most people do anyway. As Walter
Lippman once said, people don't first see and then
believe, they first believe and then they see. As far as
conflicts, I am actively soliciting them. No conflicts
means no money and I don't want to work in a maximum
security hospital for the criminally insane all the rest
of my life. (Whoops, I mean a liberty impaired haven for
the mentally challenged who are criminally defiant.) Furthermore,
the Vitamin D Council cannot do what we need to do on $12,000.00
per year (what we get from Bio Tech Pharmacal). So if you
know anyone or any business or any foundation with some
money to donate that would create a conflict, send them
our way.
My blood test came back at 120 ng/ml.
Am I toxic?
No, vitamin D toxicity has never been reliably documented
with 25(OH)D levels less than 200 ng/ml.
Ranges for humans living and working in the sun are between
50 and 100 ng/ml.
Did Quest Diagnostics do your 25(OH)D?
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