It protects against dementia, cancer and ADHD. Vitamin available for free

The list of diseases against which it protects continues to grow. Several times a year, scientists announce that they have discovered more health-promoting properties of vitamin D. This year it was found that it also protects against dementia, ADHD and dramatically reduces the risk of a severe asthma attack. It is known that vitamin D in our skin is activated by exposure to the sun. More and more doctors say that the benefits of tanning outweigh the risk of melanoma. It is worth considering, especially in Poland, where almost all of us have a shortage of it. Check what is the risk of it.

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1/ 13 Dry eye syndrome

Dry eye syndrome is a condition caused by insufficient tear production or excessive evaporation of the tear film. Researchers at the Kocaeli Derince Hospital in Turkey have conducted studies to show the relationship between vitamin D levels and symptoms of dry eye syndrome. 98 women aged over 50 participated in it. Half of them were deficient in this vitamin. During the test, it was shown that the number of tears produced in five minutes was significantly lower in this group of respondents than in women with normal vitamin D levels. Disturbed tear production in patients with vitamin D deficiency may indicate that it plays an important role in the prevention of the syndrome. dry eye.

2/13 Choroba Hashimoto

Research by American scientists has shown a link between vitamin D and the development of Hashimoto’s disease. It is the most common thyroid disease in Europe and the US, and one of the most difficult to treat. Hashimoto’s disease is very common, especially among women, and is accompanied by a number of unpleasant symptoms, incl. muscle weakness, sudden weight gain and loss, hair loss. Scientists from the Medical University of Ankara studied 180 patients who had been suffering from hypothyroidism for a long time and 180 people with recently diagnosed Hashimoto’s disease, as well as 180 healthy people. It turned out that only 20 percent of healthy people had low vitamin D levels, while only 10 patients had normal levels of vitamin D. Interestingly, the study also showed a relationship between vitamin D levels and the size of the thyroid glands – the lower it was, the greater it was.

3/ 13 Rheumatism

Research conducted by scientists from the University of Ulster has shown that vitamin D deficiency in the body disrupts the work of the immune system, especially in people over 35 years of age. Scientists examined the concentration of the vitamin and the so-called pro-inflammatory indicators, i.e. markers whose high level indicates an infection in the body. They found a surprising correlation – almost 40 percent of the studied people had too high levels of markers and decreased vitamin D levels. circulatory diseases, rheumatism, and even multiple sclerosis. Dr. Mary Ward, who leads the team of scientists, noticed that the results allowed us to clearly state the immune system stimulating effect of vitamin D. Its deficiency significantly reduces its efficiency and leads to faster development of the disease.

4/ 13 Multiple sclerosis

Scientists from McGill University in Canada analyzed the DNA of tens of thousands of Europeans in terms of the incidence of multiple sclerosis and genetic predisposition to low vitamin D production in the body. Then they examined people with typical genes. It turned out that the tendency to vitamin D deficiency contributes to the occurrence of multiple sclerosis. Research is already underway to find out whether giving additional doses of vitamin D could prevent the disease.

5/ 13 Leukemia

Researchers from the University of California in San Diego analyzed data on the number of leukemia cases in 172 countries around the world. They found that populations living in higher latitudes had at least twice the risk of developing leukemia than those living near the equator. Dr. Garland suggests that many cases of leukemia around the world may be related to the vitamin D deficiency epidemic that occurs in winter among people living in latitudes far from the equator.

6/ 13 Rickets

Rickets causes abnormal bone growth. It is most often diagnosed in infants and children from 3 months to 2 years of age. The most vulnerable to it are children who have little contact with the sun, because their bodies had less chance of producing the right amount of vitamin D. It facilitates the absorption of calcium and phosphorus, which are the building blocks of teeth and bones, and reduces their excretion in the urine, which prevents insufficient skeletal mineralization, its softening and deformation. In Poland, pediatricians recommend giving children vitamin D in the first months of life, especially those born in autumn and winter.

7/ 13 Zawał

Leeds Teaching Hospitals researchers conducted a study on 163 patients with heart failure who had low levels of vitamin D in the body. Throughout the year, some of the study participants were given a tablet containing 100 micrograms of vitamin D, while others – a placebo, i.e. a sugar pill. As it turned out, the administration of the vitamin improved the heart’s ability to pump blood. In patients receiving vitamin D, the volume of blood pumped from the chambers of the heart increased from 26 to 34 percent (in a healthy person it is 60 – 70 percent). In addition, the heart has become smaller, suggesting it is more efficient and reducing the risk of a heart attack.

8/13 Ovarian cancer

Scientists argue that vitamin D protects against cancer and extends the life of cancer patients. Dr. Paweł Grzesiowski from the Center of Preventive Medicine in Warsaw emphasizes that vitamin D inhibits the proliferation of cancer cells and the formation of new blood vessels that favor tumor development. The observations carried out in 2012 showed that taking vitamin D3 protects against breast, colon, prostate and ovarian cancer, while the results of other studies published in 2014 showed that vitamin D supplementation after 2-7 years of use reduces the risk of death from cancer.

9/13 Asthma

Oral supplementation of vitamin D doubles the risk of severe asthma attacks requiring hospitalization or an emergency room visit. These revelations were announced by scientists at the European Respiratory Society (ERS) congress in London. Before doing so, they analyzed medical data on patients from the USA, Great Britain, Canada, Japan, India, and also from Poland. Their research confirmed those carried out earlier by scientists from Denver, but on a smaller group of patients – it was a hundred children. They found that low vitamin D levels in patients with asthma were associated with poorer lung function and the use of more medications. They found that asthmatic children with low vitamin D levels had greater allergies, poorer lung function, and used more asthma medications. They also had higher levels of immunoglobulin E (IgE), which is an indicator of an allergic reaction, and skin tests showed that they were allergic to more allergens. They were also more often allergic to factors present in their homes, such as dog hair or dust mites. Insufficient vitamin D levels were also associated with poorer results in tests to assess lung function, such as the FEV1 test, which measures the volume of exhaled air during the first second of forced breaths. In addition, these children used more inhaled and oral steroids compared to their peers with normal vitamin D levels. Steroids are considered to be the most effective asthma medications known. Their action is to alleviate the inflammatory processes in the bronchi, which are the basis for the development of the disease. In further research, scientists found out why vitamin D deficiency in asthmatics has such negative effects. It turned out that this vitamin directly influences the activity of steroids. When its level is too low, the effectiveness of the steroids decreases, which requires increasing their doses in order to obtain the desired therapeutic effect. Tests on immune cell cultures showed that vitamin D increased the effectiveness of the corticosteroid dexamethasone by a factor of 10.

10/ 13 Irritable bowel syndrome

Researchers at the University of Sheffield studied more than fifty people diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome, a condition that is accompanied by frequent abdominal pain and abnormal bowel movements. They noted that as many as 82 percent of them were deficient in vitamin D. The patients who had the greatest deficiency complained more often than the rest of irritable bowel syndrome symptoms worsening and a poor quality of life.

11/ 13 Depression

Iranian scientists examined the level of vitamin D in the blood of people suffering from schizophrenia and anxiety neurosis (as many as 20 percent of Poles suffer from it) and in a control group of healthy people. The results were clear: 65 percent of patients with schizophrenia had a vitamin D deficiency. Its level was lower by 5,91 ng / ml. In the case of anxiety neurosis, it was also important – it was lower by over 4,2 ng / ml. Years ago, a direct relationship between vitamin D deficiency and depression was demonstrated. Some psychiatrists decided to treat patients not only with antidepressants, but also with preparations containing easily digestible vitamin D. The results were optimistic. It seems that similar therapy will be effective in patients with anxiety neurosis and schizophrenia.

12/ 13 Diabetes

Vitamin D is often associated with bone disease, but recent studies have revealed that vitamin D also acts as a versatile hormone that affects almost all tissues in the body. Vitamin D receptors are found in almost every cell in our body. Scientists have even linked its deficiencies with the development of diabetes. Obese people with no glucose metabolism disorders have higher vitamin D levels than diabetic patients. Also, slim people suffering from diabetes or pre-diabetes more often had too low levels of this compound in their blood. Scientists emphasize that there is a direct relationship between vitamin D levels in the body and glucose levels, but that it does not affect the body mass index. There is a group of genes in the human genome called biological clock, which turn on and off during the day. As a result, the level of proteins encoded by them decreases and increases every 24 hours. We know that working at night and eating irregularly have an influence on the action of these genes. It turns out, however, that our biological clock is also influenced by vitamin D. Researchers at Escuela de Medicina Tecnologico Monterrey in Mexico looked at the behavior of two genes in human fat cells. Cells behaved just like in the human body when they were immersed in blood serum or in vitamin D. And when the medium was depleted of the vitamin, the biological clock did not work.

13/13 Osteoporosis

Vitamin D allows you to maintain the proper calcium and phosphorus balance in the body, as well as the proper structure and function of the skeleton. Its lack can lead to osteoporosis. Studies have been carried out in which postmenopausal women have been given vitamin D for over a year. This has been shown to minimize the risk of fracture in the vertebrae and possibly other bones as well. Some reports also emphasize the indirect effect of vitamin D on the reduction of fractures, through its invaluable effect on improving muscle functioning, and thus reducing the likelihood of a fall.

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