I thought that this headline was pretty exciting:
Mad Rush At Labs For Vitamin D Tests
That headline corroborates what we see locally. The lab that we use for our D testing has just installed their own machine to do their vitamin D testing in-house. (they use to send them to another lab) Our rep for the lab also told me that they’re planning on adding a second machine within the next month or so. I think that each machine is something like $100 K.
This also means that we’ll be getting the results faster now. It use to take about 5 business days, now they’ll be done in about 24 hours. All of this is really great to hear! The need for more vitamin D testing machines means that doctors are hearing the news and getting the message that it’s important to check their patients vitamin D levels.
That’s all for now,
Darcy
If that headline doesn’t get your attention I’m guessing nothing will……

New research shows that having low vitamin D levels leads to an increase risk of death.
Do you suffer from some sort of chronic pain condition?
More and more research is showing very strong correlations between low vitamin D and chronic pain. There’s certainly nothing to lose by getting a simple blood test to check yourself for vitamin D deficiency. If you’re out there suffering, vitamin D research is telling us that properly treated low vitamin D levels might give you some relief!
Here’s a link to the latest news about this:
Vitamin D may provide relief to chronic pain patients
Vitamin D improves colon cancer survival rates
The authors of this new study found a significant trend for lower death rate as pre-cancer diagnosis levels of vitamin D increased.

As I look at the pink tint of my skin from sitting at a mostly cloudy baseball game last night, I’m reminded about how darn easily I burn and how I just can’t get away without wearing sunscreen. But us pink folks are not alone!
Although it’s been a very cold and cloud covered spring here in the Pacific Northwest, I felt compelled to post an important reminder for those who are currently (or hopefully will be soon) out in the warm summer sunshine. This is a quote from one of the biggest vitamin D researhers out there:
“My message is very clear, YOU SHOULD NEVER BURN and always use sunlight in moderation for the beneficial effect which is the production of vitamin D.” Michael Hollick MD

Hollick MD recommends 15 minutes of mid-day sun without sunscreen, that’s it. Other than that you’re looking at oral vitamin D supplementation.
From what we’ve seen with numerous vitamin D lab tests done at our clinic in the middle of last summer, it’s very difficult to get enough vitamin D in the Pacific NW summer sun. So don’t think you’re doing yourself a favor by getting extra (likely harmful) sun exposure! Chances are that you’d be getting too much UVA (burning rays) and not enough UVB (vitamin D rays).
To be sure that you’re on the right track with proper vitamin D testing and treatment, check out some of the information in our vitamin D learning center.
Do you have inflammatory joint disease, rheumatism, arthritis, backache, or osteoporosis?

In a recent study nearly three quarters of patients seen at a rheumatology clinic, which focuses on diseases affecting the joints, muscles, bones, and tendons, have a vitamin D deficiency, researchers based in Ireland found. You can read more about it here: Low vitamin D common with rheumatic diseases

Findings published yesterday in the journal Archives of Internal Medicine, may help explain why many people with no known risk factors - such as high blood pressure or smoking - inexplicably develop heart attacks. It also suggests it may be possible to reduce the incidence of the often fatal condition by popping an inexpensive (vitamin D) pill that is widely available in pharmacies and supplement stores.
The new finding may help explain why heart attack incidence has a peculiar distribution. It rises during the winter months, and is more common in northerly countries, such as Canada, regardless of whether people have other proven risk factors.
The vitamin seems to explain the trend because it has a strong seasonal fluctuation, falling in people’s bodies during fall and winter when sunlight is too feeble to make any of it in the skin.
Read more here and the abstract from the study here

Breast cancer patients with low levels of vitamin D were much more likely to die of the disease or have it spread than patients getting enough of the nutrient, a study found — adding to evidence the “sunshine vitamin” has anti-cancer benefits.
Only 24 percent of women in the study had sufficient blood levels of D at the time they their breast cancer was diagnosed. Those who were deficient were nearly twice as likely to have their cancer recur or spread over the next 10 years, and 73 percent more likely to die of the disease.
“These are pretty big differences,” said study leader Dr. Pamela Goodwin of Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto. “It’s the first time that vitamin D has been linked to breast cancer progression.”
AT LEAST 40 percent of American infants and toddlers aren’t getting enough vitamin D, according to researchers from Children’s Hospital in Boston.
Seems to me that if you’re thinking about having babies you should make sure that your own vitamin D level is good FIRST. Isn’t it just logical that if mom is vitamin D deficient, her breast milk will be too?


A new analysis of current research provides “the strongest evidence to date” that giving small children supplemental vitamin D will help prevent them from developing type 1 diabetes later on, according to the review’s co-author.