Vitamin D in Health and Kidney Disease.

Vitamin D in Health and Kidney Disease. thumbnail
By admin
Published: September 16, 2009

vitamins
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Vitamin D is an essential hormone in both health and disease, it is obtained from both dietary sources as well as direct sunlight via a process that occurs in the skin involving ultraviolet radiation. Foods that are high in vitamin D include oily fish, the ingestion of which is capable of preventing vitamin D deficiency. Measurement of vitamin D levels to determine if you have adequate amounts of the vitamin within your body is difficult as there is no consensus on the amount of vitamin D that is appropriate for all individuals. Broad guidelines that are capable of identifying very low levels as insufficient and very high levels as toxic are probably inadequate moving forward and will likely be revised when a more narrow and useful band is obtained.

Vitamin D is related to parathyroid hormone which controls the formation of bone and is now thought to be responsible for vascular health via mechanisms that are still to be worked out. Vitamin D either by direct methods or through its effect on parathyroid hormone should therefore play a role in cardiovascular disease.

Abnormalities in both vitamin D and parathyroid hormone have been cited in the press as being responsible for abnormalities that include cognitive dysfunction, muscle and bone abnormalities and cardiovascular effects. The bulk of the research into vitamin D and parathyroid hormone is obtained from the nephrology literature where its role in metabolic bone disease is well established and its emerging role in cardiovascular disease is being investigated in the dialysis and Chronic Kidney Disease population. It is intriguing that vitamin D’s important in the normal population may have been overlooked for so long.

For years the general population has had an increasing incidence of cardiovascular disease diabetes and metabolic syndrome, which has largely been driven by obesity as well as increasing rates of some cancers. Some researchers now speculate that the finding of abnormally low vitamin D in these groups may be more important than previously thought and may imply a causative role of vitamin D. This would place the vitamin at the center of multiple processes that do not seem related on the surface, implying a deeper level of complexity in terms of its involvement with metabolic processes that was unsuspected.

Madeira Beach Sunset 9/7/09
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One author speculates that many of the findings in the normal population have been under our noses the entire time in CKD patients

The findings of cardiovascular disease increased cancer and metabolic syndrome in some part may be considered a part of the aging process with the body becoming progressively more unable to heal entirely with time. The previosuly mentioned problems of cardiovascular disease and metabolic syndrome are prevalent among patients with chronic kidney disease, this was previously thought to be due to the presence of toxins that are not adequately excreted by the failing kidney. But if we think of CKD as a process of accelerated aging and compare vitamin D levels between the normal population and CKD population then the hypothesis that vitamin D may play a central role in the aging process and hence affect multiple systems simulataneously becomes more plausible.

Studying this moving forward will be challenging due to the fact that we are still in the relative infancy of vitamin D research. What does one measure to determine the effect of vitamin D ? which one of the vitamin D’s do you measure (of which there are several), what is the normal range for these measurements? Which one of the vitamin D’s do you supplement with and how does that affect levels of the other vitamin D’s.

However, research is ongoing, studies have demonstrated that positive effects can be obtained by supplementing greater than 700 iu per day, with some reduction in cancer risk and fracture rates. Supplementation with an activated form of vitamin D has also been shown to decrease protein excretion in patients with CKD this may translate into more years off of dialysis for patients with progressive nephropathy something everyone would like to see.

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Vitamin D Blogs

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30 Jul 2010 at 10:53pm


Q&A: Oils and vitamin D

by Consumer Reports Health Blog
28 Jul 2010 at 12:39pm
You reported in April that mineral oil can lower vitamin D levels. Do olive or other oils pose the same risk? —C.L., Thornhill, Ontario, Canada
No, because they don’t interfere with the absorption of fat-soluble nutrients in the gut. Unlike animal fats or vegetable oils, mineral oil—which is made from petroleum—isn’t digested by the body; rather, it passes unabsorbed through the gut and out the bowel, taking with it any of the fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, and K) that have hitched a ride.
In contrast, vegetable or fish oils and their dissolved vitamins are digested in the intestine and absorbed into the body. In fact, cod-liver oil is an excellent source of vitamin D, and many vegetable oils contain vitamins E and K.

Find out why you need vitamin D and how to get yo…


Antidepressants Do Not Prevent Suicide

by Doctor Kalitenko antiaging blog
27 Jul 2010 at 2:42pm
Even though antidepressants are much more often prescribed today, and mostly to the baby boomer generation, the statistics show that the rate of suicide among those between 45-54 are still the highest. Why is that? Shouldn’t easier accessibility and more drugs be solving our problems.
Actually, instead, it proves the point exactly, that medication and magic pills don’t really solve everything.

In years past, according to a New York Times article published about the findings, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/06/us/06suicide.html?ref=health, it has been those that are over 80 that accounted for most suicides. But that all changed five years ago when the numbers started to show that men and women (more men than women) were committing suicide between the ages of 45 and 54.
As baby boomers, …


Vitamin D And Disease Risks

by FuturePundit
26 Jul 2010 at 10:00pm
Jane Brody of the New York Times takes a look at the evidence for benefits from raising blood vitamin D levels. “As a species, we do not get as much sun exposure as we used to, and dietary sources of vitamin D are minimal,” Dr. Edward Giovannucci, nutrition researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health, wrote in The Archives of Internal Medicine. Previtamin D forms in sun-exposed skin, and 10 to 15 percent of the previtamin is immediately converted to vitamin D, the form found in supplements. Vitamin D, in turn, is changed in the liver to 25-hydroxyvitamin D, the main circulating form. Finally, the kidneys convert 25-hydroxyvitamin D into the nutrient’s biologically active form, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, also known… (Source: FuturePundit)


FDA Orders Halt on Avandia Trial Enrollment

by Diabetes Self-Management
23 Jul 2010 at 6:09pm
The US Food and Drug Administration has ordered GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), maker of the controversial diabetes drug Avandia, to halt enrollment in the TIDE (Thiazolidinedione Intervention With Vitamin D Evaluation) trial, designed to compare the cardiovascular safety of Avandia to that of the diabetes drug Actos in people with Type 2… (Source: Diabetes Self-Management)


How much sunshine do you need to get your vitamin D?

by The ND Blog: Notes from the Nutritionista by Monica Reinagel, L.D.N., C.N.S.
23 Jul 2010 at 2:24pm
There’s been a lot of hand-wringing lately about people not getting enough vitamin D.  Deficiency is quite common–especially among kids, the elderly, and those with dark skin. And a growing list of diseases and conditions are being linked with vitamin D deficiency. (See also Your Brain on Vitamin D)
Exposure to the sun, without sunscreen, causes your skin to produce vitamin D naturally. 
How much sun does it take to satisfy your vitamin D requirements? 
If you’ve read anything about this, you’ve probably seen some vague guidelines, recommending ”a few minutes every day.” But these recommendations are far too general to be useful. The amount of sun you need to meet your vitamin D requirements varies hugely depending on your location, your skin type, the time …


Aricept, Namenda, Poop, Pee, Antioxidants and Lack Of Inhibition

by Alzheimer’s Reading Room, The
22 Jul 2010 at 10:00pm
By Bob DeMarco
Alzheimer’s Reading Room

A reader sent me an email asking about Aricept and Namenda and some other issues. After typing out this response I thought I would publish it as an article.

Feel free to comment, add insight, or ask additional question. Use the comments box below this article.

Let me start by saying, I was very impressed by your email. You clearly care and are doing everything you can.

Lets start with the combination of Razadyne and Namenda. I am not familiar with the side effects of Razadyne, and I have not investigated how Razadyne and Namenda interact. So I can’t be much help on this issue.

On Namenda. There are problems with Namenda for some patients. It does not work effectively for everyone.

On the combination of Aricept and Namenda. I have informati…

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Vitamin D News

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30 Jul 2010 at 10:53pm


Vitamin D Deficiency Linked To Arterial Stiffness In Black Teens

by Health News from Medical News Today
30 Jul 2010 at 6:00am
Vitamin D deficiency is associated with arterial stiffness, a risk factor for heart disease and stroke, in black teens according to a new study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM). Black teens taking vitamin D supplementation of 2,000 international units (IU) per day had a decrease in central arterial stiffness… (Source: Health News from Medical News Today)


Vitamin D deficiency linked to arterial stiffness in black teens

by ScienceDaily Headlines
29 Jul 2010 at 8:00pm
Vitamin D deficiency is associated with arterial stiffness, a risk factor for heart disease and stroke, in black teens, according to a new study. Black teens taking vitamin D supplementation of 2,000 international units per day had a decrease in central arterial stiffness. (Source: ScienceDaily Headlines)


Vitamin D is essential for activating immune system function

by NaturalNews.com
29 Jul 2010 at 6:00am
(NaturalNews) Researchers have discovered that vitamin D plays a crucial role in activating the immune system’s ability to recognize and fight pathogens.While scientists have long known that vitamin D plays a critical role in bone health, recent research has begun to suggest that it also serves to regulate the immune system, helping prevent infection, cancer and autoimmune disorders. Until now, the mechanism by which the vitamin acts on the immune system has been unknown.In a study published in the journal Nature Immunology, researchers from the University of Copenhagen found that when a variety of white blood cells known as a T-cell comes across a pathogen in the bloodstream, it extends a receptor in search of vitamin D. If it encounters the vitamin, the T cell becomes “activated.” If the…


Vitamin D prevents heart disease, too

by NaturalNews.com
28 Jul 2010 at 6:00am
(NaturalNews) An increase in blood levels of vitamin D can significantly reduce a person’s risk of heart disease, according to a study conducted by researchers from Intermountain Medical Center Heart Institute in Salt Lake City and presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology in Atlanta.Researchers reviewed the health records of more than 9,000 people who had been diagnosed with vitamin D insufficiency and who had also undergone vitamin D testing at a later date. They found that approximately 50 percent of all patients had achieved healthy vitamin D levels of at least 30 nanograms per milliliter by the second test. Rates of heart disease were significantly lower in this group than among patients who were still deficient in the vitamin.Prior studies have shown a cor…


Personal Health: What Do You Lack? Probably Vitamin D

by NYT
27 Jul 2010 at 10:21pm
If recent findings hold up in future research, the consequences of vitamin D deficiency are likely to go far beyond excessive bone loss. (Source: NYT)

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Pair of Studies Link Vitamin D, Cognitive Ability in Seniors

by AAFP Health of the Public
27 Jul 2010 at 2:30pm
Two recent studies indicate that vitamin D intake can have a significant effect on the cognitive abilities of the elderly. Unfortunately, more than half of older Americans have insufficient levels of vitamin D, according to David Llewellyn, Ph.D., a researcher at the University of Exeter Peninsula Medical School, United Kingdom. Llewellyn presented data on this topic from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, or NHANES III, during the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference on Alzheimer’s Disease 2010, July 10-15 in Honolulu. (Source: AAFP Health of the Public)

About Roger:
Dr. Roger Smith is a nephrologist currently employed to the government of Jamaica. He is the Nephrologist in charge of Spanish Town Dialysis Unit. His interests are lupus nephritis and other glomerulopathies. He was previously a lecturer in Nephrology at the University of the West Indies in the Department of Internal Medicine and Coordinator of the Urogenital Module before moving into private and government practice.

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