Additional information and support for vitamin D supplementation - especially for cancer patients
- https://www.curetoday.com/view/vitamin-d-may-reduce-risk-for-developing-...
- https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/10.1001/jam...
- https://www.genengnews.com/news/active-vitamin-d-levels-linked-to-gut-mi...
Vitamin D is a hormone (it is not a true "vitamin"). The skin manufactures vitamin D when exposed to summer time sun over most of the body. Our modern lifestyles where we sit in front of a computer and avoid the sun leads to chronic low levels of vitamin D. Government guidelines on how much our bodies need are too low (currently between 20-50 ng/ml). They were established to prevent rickets. Only in the last few decades has the importance of vitamin D in just about every other body system become known - especially in the immune system.
Vitamin D activates T-cells to fight cancer and virus'.
Vitamin D levels necessary to maximize T-cell activation and cancer protection is greater than 50 ng/ml and maximum around 70 ng/ml.
- https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/05/090522081212.htm (note the date of this report - 2009)
Vitamin D levels above 50 ng/ml maximizes blast cell differentiation* (leukemic and normal) and minimizes solid tumor cancer metastasis by preventing cancer cells from breaking free to travel to other parts of the body. Vitamin D enables the body to attack virus (especially Covid) straight away as well as prevent over-reaction inflammatory cytokine storm from flooding lung tissue leading to hypoxia. Once I increased my vitamin D level, I have since never had a cold, flu or respiratory anything. It is quite remarkable.
The single most important health practice you and your family can do in order to minimize risk of advanced cancer (as well as viral attack) is to test for vitamin D level (25-hydroxy test) and supplement sufficient to maintain blood levels around 70 ng/ml. It is fine for your vitamin D level to fluctuate gradually over a year from a high of 100 (peak summer) to a low of 50 (peak winter). Vitamin D takes many weeks to build up and just as many weeks to lower. Vitamin D half-life (approx.) in the body is about two months which correlates remarkably well with the annual sun cycle.
In my own personal situation, I have to take 5,000 IU's of vitamin D3 (which converts to D in the body) per day summer and 7,500 IU's per day in winter to keep my overall vitamin D level in the above range. Some people may require more and others require less. This is why testing your vitamin D level is important - so you know your baseline and determine dose. I do not supplement on the days I am in the sun scuba diving. I need to do more scuba diving.
(* Only after I started supplementing with vitamin D to above 50 ng/ml did my blast cell count fall to zero. Vitamin D does not work alone, but is an absolute requirement to immune function. Adequate levels of vitamin C, K2, A, zinc & magnesium help vitamin D do its job. Vitamin D and K2 are hard to get from diet alone which is why supplementation is vital.)