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> " HSI - Jenny Thompson "

> <HSIResearch

 

> Raise a Holler

> Tue, 17 Aug 2004 08:15:28 -0400

>

> Raise a Holler

>

> Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

>

> August 17, 2004

>

>

************************************************************

 

>

> Dear Reader,

>

> As the song goes: Ain't no cure for the summertime

> blues. That was

> true in 1958 (when Eddie Cochran first sang it on

> our transistor

> radios), and it's still true today. Just last night

> I picked up a

> touch of the summertime blues when I noticed how

> much earlier the sun

> is setting already. No matter how old we get, it

> always seems that

> summer goes too fast.

>

> But the wintertime blues is a completely different

> matter. Because

> according to a new study, there may be a natural way

> to " cure " the

> wintertime blues without having to raise a fuss or a

> holler.

>

>

---------------------------

>

> Spirits rising

>

---------------------------

>

>

> In a recent issue of Nutrition Journal, researchers

> at the University

> of Toronto reported on the results of a two-part

> study that assessed

> the effect of vitamin D supplements on the sense of

> " winter wellbeing "

> in subjects who were deficient in the vitamin.

>

> In the first phase of the study, 46 subjects were

> divided into two

> groups: One group took 600 IU of vitamin D per day

> (considered an

> adequate intake), while the second group took 4,000

> IU per day

> (considered a high intake). Each subject completed a

> wellbeing

> questionnaire to evaluate depressive symptoms at the

> beginning of the

> study period in December 2001, and again at the end

> of the study in

> February 2002.

>

> In the second phase, 51 subjects who were vitamin D

> deficient were

> divided into two groups to take the same doses of

> vitamin D

> supplements as in the first phase. This study period

> ran from December

> 2002 through February 2003, and the same wellbeing

> questionnaires were

> completed.

>

> In both phases of the study, blood samples showed

> that vitamin D

> levels were considerably raised among all the

> subjects, and especially

> so in those taking the higher doses. In phase one,

> subjects in the

> high-dose group reported a significantly greater

> improvement in their

> wellbeing scores compared to the low-dose group. But

> in the second

> phase, wellbeing results were similarly – and

> significantly – improved

> in both groups.

>

>

---------------------------

>

> Getting enough

>

---------------------------

>

>

> As we've seen in many previous studies, vitamin D

> affects much more

> than our moods. In the February 2002 issue of

> Nutrition and Healing

> newsletter, Jonathan V. Wright, M.D., wrote: " It's

> very likely that if

> you're over 40 and supplement your diet with a

> generous amount of

> vitamin D, you can lower your risk of prostate,

> breast, and bowel

> cancer, along with your risk of 'essential'

> hypertension,

> osteoporosis, and tuberculosis. "

>

> For many elderly people the vitamin D deficiency

> problem is compounded

> by the fact that as we age our skin becomes less

> effective in

> producing vitamin D from sunlight exposure. That,

> coupled with

> generally less sun exposure, sets the stage for a

> variety of health

> problems associated with low levels of vitamin D.

>

> But how much vitamin D should we be getting from

> supplements? I asked

> HSI Panelist Allan Spreen, M.D., for his thoughts on

> the Toronto

> study, and he was impressed that the doses were

> found to be safe. And

> he added, " I was taught years ago, even by some

> nutritionally

> 'enlightened' practitioners, that over 600 IU was

> toxic. Looks like we

> learn something new all the time! It's only been

> relatively recently

> that people have started to recognize that the

> 'normal' RDA for

> vitamin D of 400 IU was a paltry amount. Dr. Wright

> has been pushing

> for the MINIMUM daily intake to be raised to 2000 IU

> for some time. "

>

>

---------------------------

>

> Hello, winter

>

---------------------------

>

>

> The supplement used in the Toronto study was a

> crystalline

> cholecalciferol vitamin D3 manufactured by Sigma. I

> asked Dr. Spreen

> for his opinion on this type of supplement (as

> opposed to vitamin

> D-rich cod liver oil) and he said, " Other than the

> ideal way to get

> vitamin D (solar exposure), which is difficult to

> quantify, I'd have

> no problem using the Sigma vitamin D3. And I have no

> fear at all of

> 2000 IU daily. I haven't tried 4000, but it looks as

> if it doesn't

> adversely affect hormone levels, and has no other

> ill side effects

> (not to mention the positive benefit of the current

> study). "

>

> In the e-Alert " Sunny Side of the Street "

> (12/22/03), I told you about

> Dr. Wright's recommendations for vitamin D intake:

> Between 1600 and

> 2000 IUs daily, and as much as 4000 IUs for those

> over 40. According

> to Dr. Wright, it's impossible for most people to

> get enough vitamin D

> from the sun alone, and he discourages the use of

> dairy products

> because of the many other health concerns they

> raise. Instead, he

> suggests other food sources like salmon and

> sardines, or cod liver

> oil, which provides more than 1300 IUs of vitamin D

> per tablespoon.

>

> So as summertime starts to slip away – and with it,

> our best source of

> vitamin D – it's good to know that we have several

> options to help

> keep D levels (and our spirits) high.

>

>

************************************************************

 

>

> ...and another thing

>

> Is your pituitary gland slacking off?

>

> Don't feel bad. It happens to everyone as we age:

> The pituitary gland

> tends to produce less and less human growth hormone

> (HGH).

>

> In yesterday's e-Alert ( " Jump in the Fountain "

> 8/16/04), I told you

> how supplementing with HGH has its pros and cons. In

> the pro column,

> HGH helps maintain energy levels, proper brain

> function, bone tissue

> and muscle mass, cell division, the repair of DNA

> within cells, and

> overall metabolism. But when HGH is merely added to

> the mix –

> bypassing the pituitary – problems can arise. A more

> natural

> alternative is available with the use of supplements

> that stimulate

> the pituitary gland to do its stuff.

>

> I'll call on Dr. Spreen again to help explain: " The

> idea with the

> pituitary stimulants is that it's safer to stimulate

> the body to

> increase its own production than to supply the

> actual hormone from

> outside the body, and I agree with this assessment.

> In the case of

> outside (exogenous) intake of growth hormone, you

> run the risk (well

> proven in past research) of what's called 'feedback

> inhibition,' where

> the body will cut back on its own production since

> you're willing to

> supply the body with the hormone from the outside

> without it having to

> bother. With pituitary stimulants, the body's doing

> the producing, so

> there's no feedback inhibition. "

>

> In the October 1998 HSI Members Alert we first told

> you about a

> formula of natural compounds (including specific

> amino acids,

> proteins, and botanical extracts) designed to

> stimulate receptors in

> the pituitary and hypothalamus glands that prompt

> the release of

> available stores of HGH.

>

> The formula, called Symbiotropin Pro-HGH, has since

> been shown to be

> several times more effective than the far more

> expensive HGH

> injections, but with zero feedback inhibition. And

> according to a

> study (sent to me last year by HSI Medical Advisor

> Martin Milner,

> N.D.), Pro-HGH was shown to significantly improve

> Quality of Life

> (QoL) scores in middle-aged subjects.

>

> The study examined 16 women and 9 men with an age

> range of 41 to 78.

> Questionnaires revealed that each of the subjects

> began the trial with

> severely reduced QoL, due to somatopause; a host of

> symptoms (such as

> less energy, memory loss, reduced sex drive)

> associated with low HGH

> output. After using Pro-HGH for a period of 3

> months, each of the

> subjects showed significant improvement in QoL

> scores. No adverse

> events were reported.

>

> Dr. Milner has posted more information about

> Symbiotropin Pro- HGH for

> our members on his clinic's website at cnm-inc.com.

>

> To Your Good Health,

>

> Jenny Thompson

> Health Sciences Institute

>

>

************************************************************

 

>

> Sources:

> " Randomized comparison of the Effects of the Vitamin

> D3 Adequate

> Intake Versus 100 mcg (4000 IU) Per Day on

> Biochemical Responses and

> the Wellbeing of Patients " Nutrition Journal, Vol.

> 3, No. 1, 7/18/04,

> ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

> " High Dose Vitamin D Safe and Effective in Improving

> Winter Wellbeing "

> Life Extension Foundation, 7/21/04, lef.org

> " Quality of Life Assessment in Adults with

> Somatotropin (Growth

> Hormone) Deficiency: Response to Treatment with

> Symbiotropin, an

> Effervescent Glycoamino Analogue " Mark Ladley, M.D.,

> John Sortino,

> M.D., (Unpublished)

>

> Copyright ©1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com,

> L.L.C. The e-Alert may

> not be posted on commercial sites without written

> permission.

>

>

************************************************************

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