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Vitamin D Newsletter: Men

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" John Cannell MD " <thevitamindcouncil

Men

Sun, 29 May 2005 13:54:54 -0700

 

Vitamin D Newsletter

 

5/30/05

 

 

 

How can we get American men interested in vitamin D? Most men could

care less. Say vitamin D did something men find really important,

like improve athletic performance or induce hair growth? Or, say it

improved sexual performance or increased virility? Nothing would get

men treating their vitamin D deficiency like a study that showed

vitamin D increased organ size!

 

 

 

Sixteen years ago, Professor Walter Stumpf (who taught me at UNC

School of Medicine) first made the case that vitamin D is intimately

involved with sex and reproduction. Male genital tissue contains lots

of vitamin D receptors but their significance and function remain

unknown. One researcher actually gave a vitamin D-like-drug to see if

it improved sexual performance in patients with renal failure! To bad

for the instant popularity of vitamin D, the results showed no

improvement.

 

Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1989 Nov;161(5):1375-84

 

Clin Nephrol. 1980 May;13(5):208-14

 

 

 

Vitamin D does appear to improve virility. Conception peaks in the

summer, when vitamin D levels are highest, and ebbs in the winter,

when vitamin D stores are low. Vitamin D deficiency has profound

effects on rat testicles, including dramatically reducing

spermatogenesis. Vitamin D deficient male rats were 73% less likely

to successfully father pups than vitamin D sufficient males. Vitamin D

restored virility to vitamin D deficient male rats and should do the

same for vitamin D deficient male humans.

 

Hum Reprod. 1992 Jul;7(6):735-45

 

Ann Nutr Metab. 1992;36(4):203-8

 

Ann Nutr Metab. 1995;39(2):95-8

 

J Nutr. 1989 May;119(5):741-4

 

 

 

What else are men interested in besides sex? Hair growth! In fact,

hair follicles have large numbers of vitamin D receptors but their

function is unknown. Although there are no human studies showing

vitamin D will grow men a new head of hair, vitamin D like drugs do

grow hair in mice. (By the way, both my wife and my barber have told

me my head has stopped balding and I've kept my 25(OH)-vitamin D level

around 50 ng/ml for several years.) One relevant animal study should

get the attention of men; the title contains two of their favorite

words: " nude " and " hair growth. "

 

Endocrinology. 2002 Nov;143(11):4389-96

 

 

 

What about weight? Can you see the headlines in the men's' fitness

magazines: " Vitamin D Reduces Weight. " Although dozens of studies

have found that those with the highest 25(OH)-vitamin D blood levels

weigh the least, most vitamin D scientists explain this by pointing

out that vitamin D is stored in fat tissue, thus lowering blood

levels. Of course that does not preclude vitamin D from also having

either a direct or indirect effect on weight.

 

J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2003 Jan;88(1):157-61

 

J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2004 Mar;89(3):1196-9

 

J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2005 Feb;90(2):635-40

 

Am J Clin Nutr. 2000 Sep;72(3):690-3

 

 

 

One study tried to answer that question by looking directly at vitamin

D intake and body weight. The authors found an inverse correlation.

That is, the more vitamin D in your diet, the less you weighed! If

you have a few minutes, test your knowledge by taking our quiz on

obesity and vitamin D.

 

J Nutr. 2003 Jan;133(1):102-6

 

Obesity and Vitamin D Quiz.

 

 

 

Finally, we turn to athletic performance. After sex, hair growth, and

obesity, improving athletic performance would certainly make American

men pay attention to vitamin D. Actually, what we are asking is:

" Does the most potent steroid hormone system in the human body have

any effects on balance, muscle strength, muscle mass, reaction time,

etc? " When asked that way, it would be surprising if it had none. In

fact, dozens of studies suggest vitamin D will improve athletic

performance.

 

 

 

If vitamin D improves athletic performance, then we'd predict physical

fitness should peak in the late summer when 25(OH)-vitamin D levels

peak. The only two studies that looked at season of the year and

athletic performance of trained athletes found physical fitness peaked

exactly then.

 

Acta Physiol Pol. 1981 Nov-Dec;32(6):629-36

 

Rom J Physiol. 2000 Jan-Dec;37(1-4):51-8

 

 

 

Genetic ablation of vitamin D receptors caused profound impairment in

the motor functions of mice. Furthermore, mice without the vitamin D

receptor gene showed increased anxiety; performance anxiety is

something all men want to avoid. Babies born to vitamin D deficient

rats are permanently and irreversibly brain damaged, proving that

vitamin D has profound effects on developing neural tissue. (We will

have more on this important, and tragic, research coming out of

Australia in a future newsletter.)

 

Brain Res Bull. 2004 Jul 30;64(1):25-9

 

Neuroreport. 2004 Jun 7;15(8):1271-4

 

Brain Res Bull. 2005 Mar 15;65(2):141-8

 

 

 

Muscle strength is important to athletes and it correlated with

25(OH)-vitamin D levels in older men. A vitamin D like drug improved

muscle strength in vitamin D deficient older women. In fact, it did

the same thing to a group of vitamin D deficient younger women.

Furthermore, improved lower extremity function was directly associated

with higher 25(OH)-vitamin D levels.

 

Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 1999 Jan;80(1):54-8

 

Aging (Milano). 2000 Dec;12(6):455-60

 

Neuropediatrics. 2004 Oct;35(5):290-2

 

Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Sep;80(3):752-8

 

 

 

Athletes need to be quick. A single injection of 600,000-units of

vitamin D significantly improved reaction times in older adults.

Furthermore, higher 25(OH)-vitamin D levels were also independently

associated with better reaction time and better performance time.

 

Age Ageing. 2004 Nov;33(6):589-95

 

J Bone Miner Res. 2002 May;17(5):891-7

 

 

 

Athletes need good balance. The beneficial effect vitamin D has on

balance (reduced falls) is not limited to profoundly vitamin D

deficient populations; a vitamin D-like-drug improved balance in the

general elder population, even those with " normal " 25(OH)-vitamin D

levels. A more recent study showed higher 25(OH)-vitamin D levels

correlated with better gait speed, balance and muscle strength.

 

J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2004 May;89-90(1-5):497-501.

 

JAMA. 2004 Apr 28;291(16):1999-2006

 

Osteoporos Int. 2005 Mar 3; [Epub ahead of print]

 

 

 

Vitamin D also appears to maintain muscle mass in older people but, no

one has reported similar studies of young adults. A recent review

concluded that vitamin D is an authentic strength preserving hormone,

at least in the elderly. There is no reason to think it has any less

effect on vitamin D deficient younger persons.

 

J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2003 Dec;88(12):5766-72

 

Mol Aspects Med. 2005 Jun;26(3):203-19

 

 

 

Finally, debilitating chronic pain sidelines many athletes. One Mayo

clinic study found that virtually all patients treated for chronic

pain have low 25(OH)-vitamin D levels. Furthermore, in what must be

one of the largest open studies ever reported, 360 patients with low

back pain in Saudi Arabia responded exceptionally well to treatment

with physiological doses of vitamin D. Like virtually all areas of

vitamin D research, we are still awaiting definitive research.

 

Mayo Clin Proc. 2003 Dec;78(12):1463-70

 

Spine. 2003 Jan 15;28(2):177-9

 

 

 

An impressive scientific literature suggests that vitamin D may

improve athletic performance. This should surprise no one as other

steroid hormone systems improve athletic performance. One difference

is that the U.S. government is going to find it hard to regulate the

vitamin D steroid hormone system; the sun is both a free and robust

source of vitamin D. Of course, oral vitamin D is toxic in overdose

and vitamin D toxicity would greatly impair athletic performance.

Smart athletes would get enough sun, or take enough cholecalciferol,

to keep their 25(OH)-vitamin D levels around 50 ng/ml, year around.

But then, smart non-athletes would do the same.

 

 

 

What would happen if researchers gave physiological doses of

cholecalciferol to men for a year or two and studied their sex life,

hair growth, weight and athletic performance? Would vitamin D improve

men's sex life? Would it make them more virile? Would they stop

going bald? Would they lose weight? Would they become better athletes?

 

 

 

We don't know. However, a rapidly expanding scientific literature

indicates vitamin D lowers their risk of heart disease, diabetes,

hypertension, multiple sclerosis, autoimmune illness, depression and

seventeen different types of cancer. It now appears likely that

vitamin D has an important role in treating those killer diseases as

well.

 

 

 

But that doesn't really interest most American men. Men want to know

about the important stuff. Why not start taking 2,000 units of

cholecalciferol every day and see if your sex life improves, your hair

grows back, you lose weight, and you become a better athlete? (And,

don't forget to measure down there; after all, you never know).

 

 

 

John Cannell, MD

 

The Vitamin D Council

 

9100 San Gregorio Road

 

Atascadero, CA 93422

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