Why You Need Vitamin D All-Year Round

0



dfense

Getting your daily vitamin D dose isn’t just a wintertime concern.

If you have a chronic condition – or are looking to fight your condition, Vitamin D (and don’t forget from sunshine either) may be a key player in your health and immunity.  

Vitamin D also helps to create serotonin in your body, and may benefit people on the autism spectrum.  If you live in the higher latitudes, you may need to be especially vigilant about getting enough Vitamin D.

Some of my favorite sources are sunshine and eggs.  But, supplementation may be critical for many, and you may need the D3 variety.  Check out my book, The Memory of Health, for more information on your health and Vitamin D.

Learn why your body needs more year-round with this article brought to you courtesy of Delicious Living.

You’d have to be living in a cave—and therefore vitamin D deficient—to have missed the nonstop news about this remarkable nutrient. Why all the attention? Two reasons: widespread alarm when doctors realized that a huge number of Americans had low vitamin D levels and a concurrent (and continuing) surge in research.

Other than fatty fish and some mushrooms, foods don’t offer a good dietary source of vitamin D. The best source of the “sunshine vitamin” is your own body, but to make it count you must spend 10 to 15 minutes in the sun at least three times per week with your bare, unsunscreened skin largely exposed—which most people don’t do. “The incidence of vitamin D deficiency is due almost entirely to changes in lifestyle,” says Robert P. Heaney, MD, of Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska. “Our grandparents spent more time outdoors; kids used to play outside. Nearly everyone spent a lot of time outdoors, without sunscreen. These changes in our society have crept up on us.” In this new reality, supplements become a helpful and even imperative approach.

Thanks to increased awareness of its health benefits, vitamin D is evolving from a “winter” vitamin (when your body makes less because the sun is low on the horizon) to a year-round supplement. There are two forms: D2, produced from fungus, and D3, derived from sheep lanolin or fish oil. Though not suitable for vegetarians, D3 is the type your body makes and is far better absorbed than D2 (some research suggests D2 actually lowers D3 levels in the body). Here’s why D is a must in your health arsenal.

Longer life

Because vitamin D plays so many different roles in the body, a deficiency can boost the risk of dying sooner rather than later. A European study of more than 26,000 middle-age and elderly men and women determined that low vitamin D levels correlated to 57 percent greater risk of dying from any cause, including cardiovascular diseases, over periods ranging from 4 to 16 years.

Reduced cancer risk

More than 60 studies have tied adequate vitamin D levels to a lower risk of various cancers, including those of the breast, prostate, colon, and lung, as well as leukemia and myeloma. But the vitamin really shines when it comes to improving the survival of cancer patients, especially those diagnosed with lymphoma, colorectal cancer, and breast cancer. New studies report a 42 percent to 50 percent lower risk of death from breast cancer when women maintained relatively high vitamin D levels.

Pain relief

In a 2014 study, researchers discovered that supplemental vitamin D can ease widespread pain. In another study of 60 Norwegian men and women with chronic pain, including fibromyalgia, researchers found one-fourth were deficient in the vitamin. After three weeks of regular sun exposure, participants’ vitamin D levels rose and they benefited from an average 60 percent decrease in pain. Several previous studies have found that vitamin D supplements reduce low-back pain.

Blood sugar management

A respectable body of research indicates that vitamin D, sometimes in combination with calcium, can prevent or control prediabetes and type 2 diabetes. Both nutrients aid insulin function and glucose regulation. A new study conducted at the University of Massachusetts Medical School found that taking vitamin D supplements for 8 to 16 weeks reduced blood sugar levels by 10 percent. In separate research, vitamin D supplements significantly lowered blood sugar levels and improved insulin resistance in women with gestational diabetes.

Bone and muscle strength

You need vitamin D to make muscle and to get calcium into bone. Researchers in Scotland reported that taking 1,000 IU of vitamin D daily helped older women maintain bone density, while smaller amounts (400 IU) or placebos did not. And in a 2013 study in Osteoporosis International, a combination of vitamin D and calcium intake reduced the risk of hip fractures by 20 percent in women.

Vitamin D dose by age

The ideal vitamin D blood level is 45–60 ng/mL. To reach those levels, follow these guidelines.

Infants and children 12 and younger: 400–1,000 IU daily

Teens age 13–18: 1,000 IU daily

Adults in good health: 2,000–5,000 IU daily

Adults with health problems: 2,000–10,000 IU daily. Obese adults or those on certain medications, such as ketoconazole (an antifungal), may require two to three times more.

Remember: It’s a good idea to talk to your health care provider before starting a new supplement.

Want to know more about how supplements (along with deep nutrition and mindful living and mind-body fitness) keep me well?

Click here and check out my book below as well:

High-quality supplements offered by the natural foods industry changed my life.   I am very sensitive to artificial ingredients, GMO’s, fillers, and low-quality ingredients (did you know if you are sensitive to something, it can create inflammation in the body – a big No-No!).

When I developed chronic fatigue, I turned to the natural foods industry to seek answers.   I began working in the supplements department of a natural foods store, and taking high-quality supplements (I’ve tried hundreds of them to find which ones work for me), and by learning how to eat well, I improved my energy levels and well-being significantly.

I cannot take prescription drugs, so for me, having access to high-quality supplements was a game-changer.

I take them every day, and they make a BIG difference in the quality of my life and well-being.  I discuss supplements in great detail in my book, The Memory of Health.

You can find my book here.

12705645_10154633130789689_8077410762652560810_n



Comments are closed.