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IN DEPTH

Health
Vitamin D: Boning up on the sunshine vitamin
============================================

Last Updated: Tuesday, January 5, 2010  12:05 PM ET
CBC News

(Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)(Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)
Imagine incorporating an inexpensive, single supplement into your life
that forces you to get a little sunshine and promises to strengthen
your bones, thwart different forms of cancer, stave off multiple
sclerosis and autoimmune disorders and fight infections.

New research into the preventive benefits of vitamin D has raised
hopes that the sunshine vitamin, which is produced naturally in the
body through exposure to the sun's ultraviolet rays, could extend and
improve people's lives.
How much vitamin D do I need?

The Canadian Cancer Society recommends Canadians take in 1,000 IU of
vitamin D every day. During the spring and summer, that can be
accomplished through normal daily exposure to the sun. In the fall and
winter months, a vitamin D supplement may be necessary.
In September 2007, an analysis of 18 randomized controlled trials
involving people over the age of 50 found that people who took at
least 500 international units (IU) of vitamin D daily had a seven per
cent lower risk of death compared with those given a placebo.

Lead researcher Dr. Philippe Autier said it was not clear how the
supplements lowered risks of mortality, but he suggested that vitamin
D may block cancer cell proliferation or improve blood vessel and
immune system functions. The study, published in the Archives of
Internal Medicine, reviewed research involving 57,311 participants.
The findings are part of a growing body of research regarding vitamin
D's benefits. In June 2007, the Canadian Cancer Society said that
based on current research adults should consider increasing their
daily dosage of vitamin D. The society said Canadians should now
consume 1,000 IU of vitamin D daily during the fall and winter months,
in consultation with a health-care provider.

The society noted, however, that more research on appropriate dosage
levels is needed and said it would update its recommendations as new
studies are released.
In making its recommendations, the society referred to research
including a study published in the June 2007 issue of the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Researchers at Creighton University
School of Medicine in Omaha found a 60 to 77 per cent decrease in
cancer rates in postmenopausal women who took a daily dose of 1,100 IU
of vitamin D combined with calcium over women who were given a placebo
or calcium alone. The double-blind clinical study, conducted over four
years, tested healthy women over the age of 55 living in rural
Nebraska. Critics of the study cautioned that a larger study would
have yielded more reliable and conclusive results.

But Reinhold Vieth, a nutritional scientist at the University of
Toronto, said the study is the last piece of evidence for which many
in the field have been waiting. Vieth said that many cells in the body
use vitamin D to produce a signaling molecule that allows the cells to
communicate with each other.
"Those signals do things like helping cells to differentiate to
recognize what kind of cell they should be becoming or they can signal
cells to stop proliferating and those are good things in terms of
cancer, you want differentiation so they become good well-behaved
cells and you don't want them to keep replicating all the time," he
said.

Other researchers have begun studying how the sunshine vitamin affects
other forms of cancer.
Tourists soak up the sun while walking along Patong Beach in Phuket, Thailand, in December 2005. Recent studies indicate that vitamin D, which is produced naturally in the body through exposure to the sun's ultraviolet rays, can extend and improve people's lives. Tourists
soak up the sun while walking along Patong Beach in Phuket, Thailand,
in December 2005. Recent studies indicate that vitamin D, which is
produced naturally in the body through exposure to the sun's
ultraviolet rays, can extend and improve people's lives. (David
Longstreath/Associated Press)Researchers at the University of
California, San Diego, suggested in the March 2007 issue of the
American Journal of Preventive Medicine that taking 2,000 IU of
vitamin D daily along with 10 to 15 minutes in the sun and a healthy
diet could reduce the incidence of colorectal cancer by two-thirds.
The same authors found that breast cancer rates were 50 per cent lower
in people with high levels of vitamin D in their blood, and suggested
that the average person could maintain those levels by taking 2,000 IU
of vitamin D daily and spending 10 to 15 minutes in the sun.
Similarly, a December 2006 study in more than seven million people
found that white members of the U.S. military who had high blood
levels of vitamin D were 62 per cent less likely to develop multiple
sclerosis than those with the lowest levels of the vitamin.
Researchers noted the findings were still too preliminary to suggest
that a lack of vitamin D could trigger the nerve disorder.

A study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine on May 28,
2007, suggested that women who consume higher amounts of calcium and
vitamin D may have a lower risk of developing breast cancer before
menopause. The study followed more than 31,000 women aged 45 and older
for 10 years. It found that intake of calcium and vitamin D was
moderately associated with a lower risk of breast cancer before — but
not after — menopause.
Yet another study — released on May 15, 2008 — found that women with
low levels of vitamin D may have a poorer prognosis than those with
sufficient vitamin D. The study by Toronto researchers also found that
women with too little of the vitamin had a greater chance of
recurrence and lower overall survival rates than those with healthier
amounts.

The study involved 512 women, aged 35 to 69, who were diagnosed with
breast cancer between 1989 and 1996. Their health was followed until
2007, on average for almost 12 years. The researchers found that 37.5
per cent of the patients were vitamin D deficient and 38.5 per cent
had levels that were considered insufficient for good bone health.
Only 24 per cent had sufficient levels of vitamin D in their blood.
The researchers say their study shows there is an association between
vitamin D levels and breast cancer outcome. They say it's too early to
tell whether vitamin D deficiency can cause the disease.

But less than two weeks later, another study suggested the
cancer-fighting properties of vitamin D may be not be universal. The
study, published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute,
found that a higher level of vitamin D in men is not associated with a
lower risk of developing prostate cancer. And in some cases, it may be
linked to a higher risk of developing a more aggressive form of the
disease.
Meanwhile, a study published in the June 9, 2008 issue of the Archives
of Internal Medicine found that men with low levels of vitamin D may
have an increased risk of heart attack. The study followed the medical
records and blood samples of 454 men who had non-fatal heart attacks
or fatal heart disease from January 1993 and January 2004. They
compared the data from those men with records and blood samples of 900
living men who had no history of cardiovascular disease. The
researchers also recorded diet and lifestyle factors.

The researchers found that after adjusting for several factors —
including family history of heart trouble, body mass index, alcohol
consumption, physical activity and hypertension — men with low levels
of vitamin D (less than 15 nanograms per millilitre of blood) had a
higher risk for developing heart disease than men with sufficient
levels of vitamin D (30 nanograms per millilitre of blood or more).
On Feb. 5, 2009, a Canadian-funded study found that vitamin D seems to
help control a gene that's known to increase the risk of multiple
sclerosis

"Our study implies that taking vitamin D supplements during pregnancy
and the early years may reduce the risk of a child developing MS in
later life," said co-author Dr. Sreeram Ramagopalan.
"Vitamin D is a safe and relatively cheap supplement with substantial
potential health benefits. There is accumulating evidence that it can
reduce the risk of developing cancer and offer protection from other
autoimmune diseases."

Bolstered by the benefits the sunshine vitamin offers, public health
officials are encouraging people to include vitamin D in their diets
as researchers continue to investigate how it helps the body.
The definitive study?

Yet another study is getting underway later in 2009 to determine
whether vitamin D and fish oil can lower a healthy person's risk of
getting cancer, heart disease or having a stroke. The $20 million
study is sponsored by the U.S. National Cancer Institute along with
the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and other federal
agencies.
It will follow 20,000 people for five years to see if either nutrient
can lower a healthy person's risk of getting cancer, heart disease or
having a stroke. Participants will have no history of heart attacks,
stroke or a major cancer. The study group will be limited to women 65
or older and men 60 or older. They will be randomly assigned to take
vitamin D, fish oil, both nutrients or dummy pills for five years.

One-quarter of the participants will be black. People with dark skin
can't make much vitamin D from sunlight. The researchers want to find
out if that's part of the reason African Americans have higher rates
of cancer, stroke and heart disease.
The study is expected to cost $20 million.

What is vitamin D?
Vitamin D helps the body absorb calcium thereby making bones stronger.
Certain foods such as cow's milk and margarine are fortified with
vitamin D and inexpensive supplements can help boost the body's
vitamin D levels.

A deficiency in children can trigger rickets, a bone disease that
leaves children with soft bones and skeletal deformities. As breast
milk doesn’t contain sufficient levels of vitamin D, public health
officials recommend that infants who are exclusively breastfed should
take a supplement to prevent vitamin D deficiency.
In adults, low levels of vitamin D can cause osteoporosis, a disease
that decreases bone mass and bone tissue, putting patients at risk of
fractures. People with darker skin tones are also often advised to
take a supplement as they have more difficulty generating natural
vitamin D from the sun's ultraviolet rays.

Source: B.C. Ministry of Health
Food

Serving
Vitamin D

Milk
  1. cup
100 IU

Fortified rice or soy beverage
  1. cup
100 IU

Fortified margarine
  1. tsp
53 IU

Salmon canned, pink
  1. oz
530 IU

Tuna canned, light
  1. oz
200 IU

As well, patients with a reduced ability to absorb dietary fat,
including people suffering from Crohn's disease, cystic fibrosis or
liver disease, often have low vitamin D levels.
For Canadians who suffer through long grey winters, maintaining
adequate levels of vitamin D can be difficult. From October through
March in many cities across the country, the sun's rays are not strong
enough to synthesize the vitamin naturally. Moreover the skin's
ability to produce the vitamin drops with age, putting men and women
over the age of 50 at particular risk.

To that end, Health Canada spotlighted the benefits of vitamin D when
it released the latest revision of the Canada Food Guide in February
2007. The guide says that boosting levels of vitamin D will improve
muscle strength and reduce fracture and falling rates.
Fortified foods and a dose of sunshine

The Canada Food Guide says men and women over the age of 50 are
advised to consume three servings of milk and alternatives along with
a supplement equal to 10 micrograms or 400 IU of Vitamin D every day.
One cup of milk has 100 IU of vitamin D. All other age groups are
encouraged to have two cups of milk to ensure adequate vitamin-D
levels.
Some companies have fortified their products with vitamin D but Health
Canada notes that fatty fish and egg yolks are the only natural food
sources.

Isabelle Neiderer, the director of nutrition for the Dairy Farmers of
Canada, said her group met with Health Canada officials earlier this
year to discuss the possibility of fortifying cheese and yogurt with
vitamin D.
"We feel, considering the large scientific evidence that we see at the
moment … that it would be a good thing that other milk products could
be fortified as well," she said.

In the United States, vitamin D can be added to cheese and yogurt
products.
While exposure to sun may be the best way to boost vitamin D levels,
this doesn't necessarily give sun lovers licence to tan. While being
mindful of the threat of skin cancer, people should calculate how much
time they spend in the sun depending on location, cloud cover, skin
type, age and the amount of pollution in the area. Generally, doctors
recommend that 10 to 15 minutes outdoors without sunscreen at least
twice a week is adequate.

The Canadian Cancer Society, though, does not recommend that people
rely solely on increasing their exposure to the sun to boost their
levels of vitamin D. The society points out that there are other
sources of vitamin D, including vitamin supplements, oily fish and
fortified foods.
It also warns that — for some people — increasing exposure to the sun
by even a few minutes a day could increase the risk of skin cancer.
The society recommends that people consider a balance of vitamin D
supplements and small amounts of sun exposure to maintain proper
levels of the vitamin while keeping risks of skin cancer to a minimum.

But a study by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's
Brookhaven National Laboratory that was published in National Academy
of Sciences on Jan. 7, 2008, suggested that increasing sun exposure
can be good — for some people.
The study concludes that the benefits of moderately increased exposure
to the sun's rays may outweigh the risks of developing skin cancer.
The benefits include the body's increased production of vitamin D,
which can help reduce the risk of death from other forms of cancer.

The study's authors note that the most dangerous form of skin cancer
is melanoma, which is triggered by exposure to UVA (the long ultra
violet wavelengths of the sun) and visible light. Exposure to UVB (the
short wavelengths produced by the sun) trigger the body's production
of vitamin D. The authors suggest that sunscreens could be
reformulated to block UVA rays while allowing more UVB rays through.
As researchers continue to explore how the vitamin helps the body,
Health Canada warns overenthusiastic consumers that exceptionally high
levels can be damaging. The U.S.-based Institute of Medicine of the
National Academies has set 2,000 IU of vitamin D as the daily maximum
tolerable amount. Health Canada warns exceeding this limit could lead
to an overdose that can cause kidney stones as well as damage to the
heart, lungs and blood vessels.

 
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