Multiple sclerosis - another classic
autoimmune disease .
Rheumatoid arthritis - people with this disease
commonly have low levels of vitamin D in their blood.
The more severe the disease the lower their vitamin
D. Taking vitamin D has been found to reduce disease
activity and relieve pain, as recently confirmed
by results from the Iowa Women's Health Study.
Crohn's and other inflammatory bowel diseases -
people with these diseases generally have low vitamin
D. These diseases are more common in northern states
of USA. Patients with these diseases often also
have osteoporosis. Poor absorption of fat may make
it difficult for people with these diseases to absorb
vitamin D. Sunlight could be the best answer.
Heart and circulatory diseases
High blood pressure (hypertension) - a disturbance
of calcium metabolism is often associated with high
blood pressure. Vitamin D supplements and exposure
to ultraviolet light have been found to reduce raised
blood pressure.
Heart disease - low vitamin D levels in blood are
associated with an increased risk of heart disease.
Vitamin D may soon join the classic risk factors
such as smoking and high fat diet. Risk of heart
attacks and other symptoms is greatest in winter
in the UK when vitamin D is lowest. Heart disease
is low in alpine regions where high altitude provides
greater exposure to ultra-violet light. Eskimos
(Inuit) have less heart disease despite poor sunlight
in the Arctic but they eat oily fish high in vitamin
D every day.
Diabetes type 2 - low levels of vitamin D increase
the risk of diabetes which is four or five times
more frequent in Asian immigrants in the UK than
in others. People who are overweight are at much
increased risk of diabetes partly because they have
low vitamin D.
Cancer
A number of cancers are more common in northern
countries of Europe and/or in northern states of
the USA. These include cancer of the breast, ovary,
womb, prostate, bowel, bladder, stomach, kidney,
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Additional studies strongly support D-deficiency
being a cause of breast, bowel and ovary cancer.
In the UK some 20,000 people a year are estimated
to die of cancer caused by vitamin D deficiency.
Vitamin D seems to prevent cancer by preventing
proliferation of cells and causing malignant cells
to self-destruct.
Interesting fact: A study of 8596 women in the US
found that those who had frequent exposure to the
sun, either during work or recreation, had two thirds
the risk of breast cancer compared with women who
never exposed themselves to the sun. In Hawaii,
the sunniest US state, only 9% of white women who
get breast cancer die in the subsequent five years
as compared with 16% dying within five years in
other states.
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