A little bit of sunshine
Epidemic influenza kills a million people in the world every year by causing pneumonia. These epidemics are often explosive; the word influenza comes from Italian (Medieval Latin ?nfluentia) or influence, because of the belief that the sudden and abrupt epidemics were due to the influence of some extraterrestrial force! Yet an influenza epidemic (epi: upon, demic: people) is not a pandemic (pan: all, demic: people).
But according to The World Health Organisation we have that which we all fear; a pandemic.
UCLA published a remarkable paper in the prestigious journal, Nature. The UCLA group confirmed two other recent studies, showing that a naturally occurring steroid hormone - a hormone most of us take for granted - was, in effect, a potent antibiotic. Instead of directly killing bacteria and viruses, the steroid hormone under question increases the body's production of a remarkable class of proteins, called antimicrobial peptides. The 200 known antimicrobial peptides directly and rapidly destroy the cell walls of bacteria, fungi, and viruses, including the influenza virus, and play a key role in keeping the lungs free of infection. The steroid hormone that showed these remarkable antibiotic properties was plain old vitamin D.
Vitamin D is unique in the vitamin world by virtue of three facts:
First, it's the only known precursor of a potent steroid hormone, calcitriol, or activated vitamin D. Most other vitamins are antioxidants or co-factors in enzyme reactions. Activated vitamin D - like all steroid hormones - damasks the genome, turning protein production on and off, as your body requires. That is, vitamin D regulates genetic expression in hundreds of tissues throughout your body. This means it has as many potential mechanisms of action as genes it damasks.
Second, vitamin D does not exist in appreciable quantities in normal human diets. True, you can get several thousand units in a day if you feast on sardines for breakfast, herring for lunch and salmon for dinner.
Third, the vitamin D steroid hormone system has always had its origins in the skin, not in the mouth. Until quite recently, when dermatologists and governments began warning us about the dangers of sunlight, humans made enormous quantities of vitamin D where humans have always made it, where naked skin meets the ultraviolet B radiation of sunlight.
We just cannot get adequate amounts of vitamin D from our diet. If we don't expose ourselves to ultraviolet light, we must get vitamin D from dietary supplements.
The required dose being 2,000 units of vitamin D every day.


5 Comments:
At 7:04 AM,
Lucinda said…
Dr John Cannell would appear to agree:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--NqqB2nhBE
Vitamin D is less toxic than water.
At 5:40 AM,
www.BluePixelProfits.com said…
I love reading your blog Lucinda.
Helping me lead a healthier life.
Thnx x
www.BluePixelProfits.com
At 11:56 PM,
Anonymous said…
actually a pandemic is a portmanteau word.
Its an epidemic that the media have got hold of and caused panic.
pan(ic epi)demic
chris472
At 11:36 AM,
Lucinda said…
An epidemic that causes widespread panic. The portmanteau word pandemic.
Thank you. Hopefully the solution to widespread panic will not be chemical! GSK might have just the chemical. Advice: Upgrade stock to buy.
At 4:02 AM,
Karen said…
Hi Lucinda,
An interesting read on vitamin D.
There also may be some evidence that it has a role to play in Multiple Sclerosis. The nearer to the equator you go the less MS you find and at the equator it is virtually unknown from what I understand.
Some think if a woman has a lack of vitamin D when pregnant her child is more susceptible to MS later on in life.
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