If you don't already subscribe to the Vitamin D Council newsletter, I urge you to do so. The current issue contains some very valuable information about vitamin D overdoses, and about the way that vitamin D deficiency apparently can present as any of a variety of diseases.
There are also some comments about the possibility that vitamin D deficiency may be behind the tendency of many diseases to wax and wane, as is so common with the IBDs, for example. IOW, sufficient vitamin D may be a prerequisite in order for certain diseases to go into spontaneous remission, while a vitamin D deficiency could be the cause of relapses of symptoms - some interesting thoughts.
Consider this quote, for example:
Joe, I'm thinking about you, and your Crohn's diagnosis, especially, as I write this, but there is a very good chance that this phenomenon applies to virtually any of the autoimmune diseases, including MC. IOW, what I am saying is that while vitamin D probably cannot "cure" any disease, (by itself), once the disease presents, then sufficient vitamin D is a prerequisite for remission. That's a very profound statement, if it turns out to be true, (and I'm confident that it will be proven to be true, some day).Let’s look at one rare disease, childhood multiple sclerosis, a nightmare for any parent to face. The child will have problems with vision, co-ordination, or balance, with relapses and remissions, that is the disease seems to come and go. Recently, Dr. Ellen Mowry and her colleagues discovered that these relapses, these periods of active autoimmune illness, are associated with low levels of vitamin D. The disease comes and goes as vitamin D levels come and go. Dr. Mowrey speculated that a 15 ng/ml increase in vitamin D levels would cut the relapse rate in half.
You can subscribe at their site, but the newsletter cannot be viewed there - you have to subscribe, and receive it by e-mail, in order to be able to read it. I highly recommend it.
http://www.vitamindcouncil.org/
Tex

Visit the Microscopic Colitis Foundation Website


