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Vitamin D boosts calcium absorption, treats

psoriasis,

prevents osteoporosis and Breast Cancer

 

 

Vitamin D boosts calcium absorption, treats psoriasis,

prevents

osteoporosis and Breast Cancer JoAnn Guest Apr 02,

2005 14:15 PST

Interview with Dr. Michael Holick

http://www.newstarget.com/003142.html

 

The following is part one of an eight-part interview

with Dr. Michael

Holick, author of " The UV advantage " and one of the

world's most

respected authorities on vitamin D and the health

benefits of natural

sunlight. His work can be found at

www.UVadvantage.com. Be sure to

print

out the vitamin D myths, facts and statistics page

summarizing the key

points of this interview.

 

Adams: Today we're speaking with Dr Michael Holick,

Thank you for

joining us today Dr Holick.

 

Dr. Holick: Oh, it's my pleasure.

 

 

 

Adams: For those who may not be familiar with your

work and your

website, can you give a brief introduction of what you

cover and how

you

got into it?

 

Dr. Holick: Sure, I've been doing research in the

vitamin D field for,

now, more than 30 years, and I happened to be in the

right place at the

right time as a graduate student at the University of

Wisconsin, and

worked with one of the authorities in vitamin D, Dr.

Hector DeLuca. As

a

graduate student my PhD project was actually the

isolation and

identification of the active form of vitamin D, and my

roommate and I,

over the next two years, were the first to chemically

synthesize it.

And

what was really neat about that experience was that we

actually gave

this to patients when I was in medical school -- and

patients that had

bone diseases associated with kidney failure, that

were wheelchair

bound, that had severe bone pain started walking

again.

 

That was my first introduction into one of the major

benefits of

activated vitamin D and the development of it for the

treatment of a

bone disease.

 

Adams: Does this mean you and your colleague were the

first to

synthesize this form of vitamin D?

 

Dr. Holick: Yes, the active form of vitamin D that's

made by the

kidney,

it's called 125-dihydroxy vitamin D.

 

Adams: Is this procedure more widely used now, for

example to make

vitamin D supplements?

 

Dr. Holick: No, because this active form of vitamin D

is available only

by prescription. It's used to treat osteoporosis in

Europe and Japan.

And it's also used to treat bone disease and kidney

failure patients,

and has a lot of other uses as well.

 

Adams: So as you were doing the research on this, you

were able to

immediately observe the health impact of it, right

away.

 

Dr. Holick: Exactly, and what we began to realize was

that vitamin D

was

much more complex than thought. We always knew that

vitamin D was made

in your skin when you are exposed to sunlight, but it

was only in the

1970s that it was finally appreciated that it actually

had to go on

this

circuitous journey, first to your liver to get

hydroxylated, kind of

activated, modified -- what's called 25-hydroxy

vitamin D - it's the

major circulating form of vitamin D that doctors

should be measuring in

your blood to determine your vitamin D status. But

that is also

inactive, and it has to go to your kidneys, and then

in the kidneys it

gets modified again, to its active form, which we call

125-dihydroxy

vitamin D. And it's this 125-dihydroxy vitamin D

that's responsible for

telling your intestines to absorb calcium from your

diet more

efficiently, and to make sure that your blood calcium

is normal and

that

you have healthy bones.

 

Adams: So if there is a failure of any of these body

systems along the

chain, that can suppress the circulating active

vitamin D then?

 

Dr. Holick: Exactly, and in fact if you have severe

liver disease, for

example, you have two problems. One is that you may

not be able to

modify it, to get the 25-hydroxy vitamin D, and

secondly if you have a

fat malabsorption problem where you can't absorb

dietary fat, since

vitamin D is a fat-soluble vitamin, then you can't

absorb vitamin D and

you become deficient in vitamin D. Then if you have

any kind of kidney

disease, you need either activated vitamin D or one

its analogs in

order

to be able to maintain healthy bones.

 

Adams: In the testing then that you mentioned, was

this active form

being given through injection?

 

Dr. Holick: You could either take it orally or by

injections.

 

Adams: Interesting. So you mentioned the positive

impact on people who

had trouble walking, who had osteoporosis, and various

bone diseases.

What other effects did you observe?

 

Dr. Holick: We also realized a few years later was

that your skin

doesn't only make vitamin D, which I think we'll talk

about a little

bit

more in a minute, but it also recognizes activated

vitamin D. And what

was really, to me, quite amazing, was that in 1985 we

realized the

possibility that if you take activated vitamin D and

put it in skin

cells that you culture from humans, it turns out that

activated vitamin

D was probably one of the most potent inhibitors of

skin cell growth.

So

I reasoned back in 1985 that if that was true, maybe

you could take

advantage of it by developing it to treat the

hyperproliferative skin

disorder psoriasis. And indeed it's one of the

treatments of choice now

worldwide. Both activated vitamin D and its analogs

are used worldwide

as the first line therapy for treating psoriasis.

 

And so again it shows you the breadth of activity that

vitamin D has.

Not only just to regulate calcium metabolism and bone

health, but to

regulate cell growth. And that's why we started

realizing that people

who live in higher latitudes and are more prone to

vitamin D deficiency

and are more prone to developing common cancers and

dying of them, such

as cancer of the colon, prostate, breast and even

ovaries. And we think

that that's in part due to the body's inability to

make enough

activated

vitamin D to help regulate cell growth and to keep

cell growth in

check.

 

 

Adams: That would explain the links between breast

cancer, prostate

cancer, colon cancer and vitamin D deficiency.

 

Dr. Holick: Exactly. And then the key factor that we

found was that, as

I mentioned to you originally, we realized that the

kidney was the

major

source of the activation of vitamin D. And the

function of that is to

make activated vitamin D for bone health. But we now

also know that the

prostate, breast, colon and many other tissues in the

body can also

activate vitamin D. And by doing so, we think that it

locally produces

this 125-dihydroxy vitamin D, which then regulates

cell growth. It's a

cell growth modulator. And I spell all this out in my

book " The UV

advantage " at www.UVadvantage.com

_________________

 

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

DietaryTi-

www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Genes

 

 

 

 

AIM Barleygreen

" Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future "

 

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html

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