18th June 2013
By Joshua Corn
Guest Writer for Wake Up World
Joshua Corn is the Editor-in-Chief of the natural health and wellness site, Live in the Now. Josh is a health freedom advocate and veteran of the natural health industry. He has been actively involved in the natural health movement for over 15 years, and has been dedicated to the promotion of health, vitality, longevity and natural living throughout his career.
Josh has successfully overcome several personal health challenges through natural means, and believes that sharing information can empower people to take control of their health so they can solve their own problems and live life to its fullest potential.
Josh is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of Live in the Now. Additionally he serves as CEO of SAN, a company that has been formulating premium dietary supplements since 1995. Josh is currently working on his first book about natural health, and gearing up to launch the Live in the Now radio show.
In addition to his work in the natural health field, Josh is an avid outdoorsman, yoga practitioner, animal lover and father of two sons who remind him every day to “live in the now”.
By Joshua Corn
Guest Writer for Wake Up World
By now, you’re probably aware of the importance of vitamin D.
Beyond supporting strong bones and muscles, a healthy immune system and
an active brain, research shows that maintaining optimal vitamin D levels can help you avoid a wide range of chronic health problems and live a longer, healthier life.[1,2,3]
The unfortunate fact, however, is that most of us have critically low
levels of vitamin D, due to the fact that we don’t spend enough time in
the sun. And when we do venture outdoors, we often go out of our way to
“protect” ourselves from the sun’s ravages.
Guess What? You’re Probably Vitamin D Deficient
Unfortunately, despite growing awareness of the role vitamin D plays in
maintaining optimal health, leading experts estimate that up to 75% of
all adults are low in vitamin D![4] The problem is that most people
mistakenly assume that their vitamin D levels are just fine, even though
the odds are stacked against them. The fact is, unless you are taking
steps to maintain healthy vitamin D levels, you are most likely vitamin D
deficient.
Why Are So Many People at Risk?
Vitamin D deficiency has become a global epidemic for one simple reason:
people don’t get enough sun exposure. The human body only produces
vitamin D in response to ultraviolet rays from the sun. While our bodies
are designed to spend most of our time outdoors, the majority of us
spend our days confined inside buildings. Ultraviolet rays cannot
penetrate glass, so even if you’re in a car or in a sunny room, your
body is not producing vitamin D.
Additionally, your body’s vitamin D production becomes less efficient
with age, and the fact that people are living longer means that a
growing number of older people are severely deficient.
Don’t Get Scammed: The Sun Is Not “Evil”
For years now, misinformed doctors, as well as the sunscreen and
cosmetics industries, have made the sun out to be the “boogey man.” They
advise that the sun’s rays are very damaging, and this has scared us
into believing that we should never so much as leave the house without
wearing sunscreen.
Yet breakthrough research has shown that wearing sunscreen significantly
interferes with the body’s ability to produce vitamin D from sun
exposure. In fact, many experts now recommend limited daily exposure to
the sun without sunscreen.
However, for most people, the issue is more about not being able to
spend enough time outside to produce adequate amounts of vitamin D
regardless.
What Are the Signs of Deficiency?
Vitamin D deficiency may be symptomless at first, but as it progresses
it often causes depression, cognitive problems, chronic pain, fragile
bones and a weak immune system. Even more troubling is that studies have
linked low vitamin D levels to increased risk for serious health
conditions that can result in premature death.[5,6,7]
Sadly, many people are given a cocktail of pharmaceutical drugs to
“treat” a simple nutritional deficiency. If you have any nagging
concerns that your doctor seemingly can’t resolve, increasing your
body’s vitamin D levels may just be the natural remedy you’ve been
searching for.
The Best Way to Make Sure You’re Protected
There are only two ways to get vitamin D in the amounts you need for
optimal health: sun exposure and vitamin D supplementation. You can’t
get it from food, despite what the dairy industry might like you to
believe. While some products like milk are fortified with vitamin D, in
almost all cases, the amount used is far too low to correct a
deficiency.
So for most people, unless you happen to work outdoors, a vitamin D
supplement is a must. You may eventually want to get your vitamin D
levels tested by your doctor, but you shouldn’t wait to start increasing
your levels. Vitamin D is one of the least toxic substances known
making it hard to overdue it. The bottom line is that you’re better safe
than sorry.
Don’t Take the Wrong Type of Vitamin D!
Your doctor is most likely to recommend vitamin D2, which is the
synthetic form of vitamin D. Why? Because the pharmaceutical companies
cannot patent natural compounds, so in order to make money, they have to
create and market synthetic versions — even if they are proven to be
less effective than the real thing.
Since your doctor is unlikely to send you to the store to pick up a
natural dietary supplement, he or she will probably write you a
prescription for the synthetic D2 version, which has been shown to be poorly absorbed and less effective than
the natural form.[8] Just because your doctor prescribes it doesn’t
mean it’s more effective! The better option is to take vitamin D3 (also
known as cholecalciferol). It’s more absorbable and provides the
greatest benefits.
Make Sure to Take Enough Vitamin D
Most people who do take vitamin D take way too little, because the
current Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) is set at only 600 IU. Most
experts now agree that this is woefully inadequate. Despite pleas from
the scientific community and public health leaders, the government has
stubbornly refused to increase the RDA, putting millions at risk
unnecessarily. The reason behind this is unknown, but many people think
that the strong influence of the food and pharmaceutical industry
lobbies plays a role.
According to Dr. John Cannell, Director of the non-profit Vitamin D
Council, healthy adults should supplement with 5,000 IU of vitamin D3
daily to avoid deficiency and achieve superior health.
Vitamin D Doesn’t Work All by Itself
I hope I’ve made the case as to why it’s critical to take supplemental
vitamin D3. But it’s equally important to make sure that you’re getting
adequate amounts of the nutrients that team up with vitamin D to ensure
optimal utilization within the body. Based on the latest research, here
are vitamin D’s most important partners:
- Magnesium: Involved in every stage of vitamin D metabolism. Having adequate amounts present is critical to proper utilization of vitamin D.
- Zinc: Each vitamin D receptor has a zinc molecule that is needed to receive vitamin D. In absence of zinc, it will not be properly absorbed.
- Boron: Necessary for the rapid action of vitamin D on the cellular wall. Being deficient in this nutrient can cause low vitamin D levels.
- Vitamin C: Vitamins C and D work together synergistically to support the body’s immune system, as well as to boost overall antioxidant levels.
- Vitamin K2: Works with vitamin D to ensure that calcium is stored in the bones and not on the walls of blood vessels.
- 1. Semba RD, et al. Relationship of 25-hydroxyvitamin D with all-cause and cardiovascular disease mortality in older community-dwelling adults. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2010 Feb; 64 (2): 203-9.
- 2. Zittermann A, et al. Vitamin D deficiency and mortality. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care. 2009 Nov; 12 (6): 634-9.
- 3. Pilz S, et al. Vitamin D and mortality in older men and women. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 2009 Nov; 71 (5): 666-72.
- 4. Norman AW, Bouillon R. Vitamin D nutritional policy needs a vision for the future. Exp Biol Med.2010 Sep; 235(9): 1034-1045.
- 5. Ingraham BA, et al. Molecular basis of the potential of vitamin D to prevent cancer. Curr Med Res Opin. 2008 Jan; 24 (1): 139-49.
- 6. Krishnan AV, et al. The role of vitamin D in cancer prevention and treatment. Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am. 2010 Jun; 39 (2): 401-18, table of contents.
- 7. Wang TJ, et al. Vitamin D deficiency and risk of cardiovascular disease. Circulation. 2008 Jan 29; 117 (4): 503-11.
- 8. Bjelakovic G, et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Jul 6;(7):CD007470.
Joshua Corn is the Editor-in-Chief of the natural health and wellness site, Live in the Now. Josh is a health freedom advocate and veteran of the natural health industry. He has been actively involved in the natural health movement for over 15 years, and has been dedicated to the promotion of health, vitality, longevity and natural living throughout his career.
Josh has successfully overcome several personal health challenges through natural means, and believes that sharing information can empower people to take control of their health so they can solve their own problems and live life to its fullest potential.
Josh is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of Live in the Now. Additionally he serves as CEO of SAN, a company that has been formulating premium dietary supplements since 1995. Josh is currently working on his first book about natural health, and gearing up to launch the Live in the Now radio show.
In addition to his work in the natural health field, Josh is an avid outdoorsman, yoga practitioner, animal lover and father of two sons who remind him every day to “live in the now”.
No comments:
Post a Comment