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[MSSupport] Healthy Food Sources for Vitamin D

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Misty L. Trepke

www..com

 

http://drbenkim.com/nutrient-vitamind.html

 

The Essentials of Vitamin D

 

Vitamin D is one of the most misunderstood and important nutrients

for human health.

 

What Exactly Does Vitamin D Do in Your Body?

 

* Helps to maintain strong bones and teeth

 

* Enhances the strength and efficiency of your immune system,

which decreases your risk of developing autoimmune conditions like

rheumatoid arthritis and lupus

 

* Helps your body regulate its blood sugar levels, playing an

important role in preventing type II diabetes

 

* Helps to prevent high blood pressure

 

The conventional medical perspective on vitamin D is that you can

get all that you need by exposing your arms and legs to sunlight for

10 minutes a day. If only it were that simple!

 

It's true that a great source of vitamin D is sunlight. Sunlight

contains ultraviolet (UV) rays that come in three different lengths:

UV-A, UV-B, and UV-C. UV-B rays are the ones that are capable of

producing vitamin D in your body by acting on the cholesterol found

in your skin.

 

The reason why conventional advice about getting 10 minutes of

exposure to sunlight everyday is woefully simplistic is that the

amount of UV-B rays that reach your skin and produce vitamin D

depends on a variety of different factors, the main ones being:

 

1. Skin Colour

Lighter skin colour allows deeper penetration by UV-B rays,

which decreases the amount of sunlight exposure needed for adequate

vitamin D production. Needless to say but I'll say it anyway, the

darker your skin, the harder it is for UV-B rays to penetrate it and

produce vitamin D, increasing your need for sunlight exposure.

 

2. Season

People living in Canada, Europe, and the lower 48 states of

America receive little to no UV-B rays from early autumn to late

spring.

 

3. Altitude and Latitude

The higher you live above sea level, the greater exposure you

have to UV-B rays. The higher you live above the equator, the less

exposure you have to UV-B rays.

 

4. Pollution and Clouds

Both decrease the number of UV-B rays that reach you.

 

5. Age

As people age, natural degenerative changes that occur in skin

make it harder for UV-B rays to convert cholesterol to vitamin D.

Elderly people typically need to rely more on food sources than

sunlight for their vitamin D needs.

 

So How Much Do You Need?

The current Dietary Reference Intakes by the Institute of Medicine

range from 200 to 600 IU per day depending on age, with the U.S.

upper limit for vitamin D being 2,000 IU per day. Ultimately, the

most responsible recommendation that I can make is to strive to take

in no more than 800 IU per day without regular blood testing for

vitamin D status. This number takes into account my own clinical

experiences as well as the work and recommendations of Krispin

Sullivan, C.N., and Reinhold Vieth, M.D., both of whom have a wealth

of experience and knowledge regarding the relationship between

vitamin D and human health.

 

Here are some healthy food sources of vitamin D:

 

Food Sources Serving Vitamin D (IU)

Wild salmon, canned 3 ounces 530

Cod liver oil 1 teaspoon 400

Sardines, canned 3 ounces 231

Organic egg yolk 1 medium 25

 

How to Test Your Vitamin D Status

If you plan on getting more than 800 IU of vitamin D per day, I

highly recommend that you have your blood level of vitamin D

monitored about once every 6 months. Ask your doctor or laboratory

for the 25(OH)D test, also known as the 25-hydroxyvitamin D test.

Please note that some labs do a similar test called 1-25(OH)D test,

which is not as accurate a marker of your vitamin D status.

 

If your test shows a level lower than 20 ng/ml (50 nmol/l), you have

a higher than average risk for prostate and breast cancer, as well

as autoimmune conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and lupus.

 

If your test shows a level higher than 70 ng/ml (175 nmol/l), you

have a high risk of suffering from kidney stones, heart disease, and

bone loss. Please know that while having too little vitamin D in

your blood is a huge problem, having too much vitamin D in your

blood can cause equally dangerous health problems.

 

I believe that a healthy range for the vast majority of people is

between 35-50 ng/ml (87.5-125 nmol/l).

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