|
How Sunlight Can Save
Your Life
 
Diseases Caused
By Vitamin D Deficiency By Oliver Gillie The
Independent - UK 1-27-4
Experts hotly debate which diseases
may truly be caused by vitamin D deficiency.
Nevertheless the extent of the evidence and its
consistency makes a powerful case for D-deficiency being
an important cause of over a dozen chronic diseases and
almost as many cancers. Other important factors such as
obesity, lack of exercise, or a diet containing too many
calories, are also known to increase the risk of many of
these diseases. But both obesity and lack of exercise
are linked with D-deficiency and so the evidence is
confused. Vitamin D, is stored in fat and becomes 'lost'
in obese people, while people who take exercise often
spend more time outdoors in the sun.
Nervous
system diseases
Last year Professor
John McGrath and others at the University of Queensland
found that pregnant rats deprived of vitamin D give
birth to baby rats with serious brain abnormalities.
This work will eventually be seen to be as important as
the discovery that folic acid deficiency during
pregnancy causes severe spinal deformities (spina
bifida) in offspring, or that thalidomide given to
pregnant animals causes abnormalities of the limbs. The
importance of their article published in Neuroscience
(volume 118, pp641-653) has not yet been appreciated but
it provides a means of understanding several
neurological diseases which have puzzled doctors for
more than a century.
Multiple sclerosis (MS),
Schizophrenia, and Parkinson's disease - people with
these diseases are more likely to have winter or spring
birthdays. MS and Parkinson's diseases are more common
in northern countries or states of America. People with
MS have worse symptoms in winter and brain scans show an
increase in damage to the brain of MS people in winter.
Supplements of vitamin D given to babies may prevent MS
and schizophrenia. A very severe form of Parkinson's
disease occurs in people with dark skin living in the
UK.
Alzheimer's disease and Amyotropic lateral
sclerosis (motor neurone disease) are believed by some
neurologists to be similar in the way they develop to
Parkinson's disease but affecting different parts of the
brain or nervous system. These diseases are several
times more common in black people living in United
States than in black people living in traditional
societies in the Tropics. In northern countries there
are more births of these two diseases in winter.
Autism - people with autism have winter
birthdays more often than would be expected. The cause
of the disease is a mystery, but increased winter
birthdays could be an important clue suggesting that
vitamin D deficiency in pregnancy is a cause, at least
in a proportion of cases.
Autoimmune diseases
These are diseases in which the body is attacked by its own immune system. Such
attacks are generally thought to be triggered by infection, but deficiency of
vitamin D causing abnormal proliferation of cells and changes in the immune system
may be a key factor. There are many of these diseases and some are quite rare.
Only a few have been studied in depth.
Diabetes type 1 - a classic autoimmune disease. It is more common in northern
countries and an increase in winter birthdays have been found in some places.
Vitamin D supplements in pregnancy or first year of life protects against the
disease and vitamin D may also delay progress of the disease after it has begun
to cause problems.
More.....Page
TWO
|