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YOU USE UP VIT D -- fast as you can make it

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The Vitamin D Council has partnered with ZRT Labs to make a discounted take-home Vitamin D Test Kit that you can order on the Internet. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of each test will be donated to the Vitamin D Council by ZRT to help us in our mission to end the worldwide epidemic of vitamin D deficiency. The tests will be available to order in either a quantity of one (1) or four (4). Whether you will be testing your entire family or simply retesting yourself, consider the 4 test kit as it is much less expensive per test.

How it works
This is a home test for 25(OH)D, requiring a finger or heel stick to get several drops of blood. You order the test kit, which ZRT will ship to you. After receiving your kit either you, or someone you know in the medical field, will do a finger or heel stick and put the blood on the blotter included in the kit. You will then send the blotter paper back to ZRT in the envelope provided. ZRT will perform the 25(OH)D test in their lab and send the results directly back to you. The Vitamin D Council has verified that results obtained by ZRT are accurate and correspond very well to the results given by both LabCorp and DiaSorin RIA. These tests are good for either adults or children and avoid the venipuncture many children dislike.

However, if you have insurance, you may be able to save money by going to your doctor instead. You can have your doctor order the test-some insurance companies will pay for a 25(OH)D test, some will not. Unfortunately, about 20% of United States doctors order the wrong test. They order a 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D, thinking that by measuring the most potent steroid in the human body, calcitriol, they are getting useful information. They are not. 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D is an adaptive hormone; it goes up and down with calcium intake. So these doctors see the 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D is normal or high and tell their patients that they are ok when really, they are vitamin D deficient-advice that may prove fatal. Furthermore, most doctors who see a 25(OH)D of 30 ng/ml will tell you that level is fine when it is not-that is, few doctors know how to correctly interpret the test results. With ZRT, you are in control of when you test, how often you test, and what you do with the results.

How Much Vitamin D Should I Take?
Again, we don't know. This is a difficult question because it relies on so many personal factors. Everyone's situation is either a lot, or at least a little, different. How much vitamin D you need varies with age, body weight, percent of body fat, latitude, skin coloration, season of the year, use of sunblock, individual variation in sun exposure, and-probably-how ill you are. As a general rule, old people need more than young people, big people need more that little people, heavier people need more than skinny people, northern people need more than southern people, dark-skinned people need more than fair-skinned people, winter people need more than summer people, sunblock lovers need more than sunblock haters, sun-phobes need more than sun worshipers, and ill people may need more than well people.

Quite a few factors are involved, as you can see. However, don't feel bad, no one understands it. Vitamin D is used by the body-metabolically cleared-both to maintain wellness and to treat disease. If you get an infection, how much vitamin D does your body use up fighting the infection? If you have cancer, how much vitamin D does your body use up fighting the cancer? If you have heart disease, how much vitamin D does your body use up fighting the heart disease? If you are a child with autism, how much vitamin D does your brain need to turn on the genes that autism has turned off? If you are an athlete, how much vitamin D does your body use to make you stronger and quicker? Nobody knows the answer to these questions.

What We Recommend
If you use suntan parlors once a week or if you live in Florida and sunbathe once a week, year-round, do nothing. However, if you have little UVB exposure, my advice is as follows: healthy children under the age of 2 years should take 1,000 IU per day-over the age of 2, 2,000 IU per day. Well adults and adolescents should take 5,000 IU per day. Two months later have a 25-hydroxy-vitamin D blood test, either through ZRT or your doctor.

Start supplementing with the vitamin D before you have the blood test. Then adjust your dose so your 25(OH)D level is between 50-80 ng/ml, summer and winter. But remember, these are conservative dosage recommendations. Most people who avoid the sun-and virtually all dark-skinned people-will have to increase their dose once they find their blood level is still low, even after two months of the above dosage, especially in the winter. Some people may feel more comfortable ordering the blood test before they start adequate doses of vitamin D. We understand. Test as often as you feel the need to, just remember, no one can get toxic on the doses recommended above and some people will need even more.

John Jacob Cannell MD

Explore topics in this discussion:

Autism Heart disease Cancer

2 replies

Wow! thanks for the great info! I"m going to print this out and take it with me when I see my doctor this month. My plan was to get my blood tested based on the Vit D3 I am now taking (I put CA + D3 in my 2 smoothies per day. then I'll have a baseline. if my D3 is LOW, I'll know I need to remember to boost my D3 EVERYDAY. I often forget the capsules and just remember the D3 that is in the Ca formula. If my baseline is ok without the EXTRA D3, I'll have that valuable info. if it is low...well...then the trick is figuring out how much extra I need per day, to maintain a good level. I live in the NE where Sun is minimal, especially in the winter. And even if I am outside, all that is exposed is my face! I don't use sunscreen since I'm not out in the sun all that much :(
I love having something in writing to take with me. This is a new Doctor for me so I'm actually trying to determine if she and I are on the same page, health wise. I want someone geared to functional and integrative medicine, not just the party line (AMA, Pharmaceutical). Thanks again for the great info!
I've also heard that the D in the 50,000 IU doses that people take weekly for 8 - 12 weeks is actually Vit D2. any validity to that?

mb

mb

what I have noted --the D2 is strictly from the sun--so therefore cant be capsulized? though we know that fruits are made by the sun==it then is D3.
wish I had handy for you the one article that clarified that difference for me-......
so glad this was helpful to you. i thought it was that.

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