Tuesday, April 27, 2010

A Repost From NaturalNews

Vitamin D reduces diabetes risk by 43 percent - is there anything this vitamin can't do?

Tuesday, April 27, 2010 by: Ethan A. Huff, staff writer
Ads by Google
Diabetic Diet & Meals
Free Diabetic Recipes > Breakfast,
Lunch - Snack - Dinner - Dessert.
www.diabetesinfocenter.org
Diet Induced Obese Mice
Free weekly email with quantities
available for researchers
jaxservices.jax.org
Natural Diabetes Control
Stabilize blood sugar levels and
Optimize hormonal production!
ayurgold.com
Share/Save/Bookmark Email this article to a friend Printable Version FREE Email Newsletter

Articles Related to This Article:

The inside scoop: Natural Health Products Expo West industry event

NaturalNews emerges as top truly independent natural health news site

NaturalNews readers making waves across the natural health, natural living markets (opinion)



NaturalNews Store Specials:

Raw organic Vanilla powder at 40% off

Revolutionary new Hurom Slow Juicer at the lowest price on the 'net + FREE shipping!

Certified Organic Nutiva Hemp Seeds at a huge discount (+ FREE bottle of hemp oil)

See more at the NN store...

(NaturalNews) A team from Warwick Medical School in the U.K. has found that people who maintain healthy vitamin D levels are 43 percent less likely to get heart disease or diabetes. After evaluating 28 different studies conducted on nearly 100,000 people, researchers concluded that people who eat oily fish two or three times a week and five servings of fruits and vegetables a day are able to achieve healthy levels of vitamin D.

While the team evaluated only natural sources of vitamin D, including from sunlight exposure and consumption of oily fish like tuna, salmon, and mackerel, it is probable that supplementation with natural vitamin D3 would prove to have the same effect.

Published in the journal Maturitas, the study revealed that high levels of vitamin D reduce the risk of developing cardiovascular disease by 33 percent, metabolic syndrome by 51 percent, and type-2 diabetes by an astounding 55 percent.

According to Dr. Johanna Parker, one of the study authors, sunlight exposure is the best way to get vitamin D. "People should expose themselves for 30 minutes twice a week – this means exposing the face and arms with no sunscreen. This would provide the body with adequate vitamin D," she explained.

Some experts recommend getting sunlight exposure every single day, especially in the summer when the sun delivers the most ultraviolet (UV) rays which produce vitamin D in the skin. Twenty minutes of sunlight exposure on a summer day can produce a healthy 20,000 IU of vitamin D in the skin, delivering optimal protection from all kinds of diseases.

Last summer, a study published in Diabetes Educator also found that vitamin D helps to prevent diabetes and can even help those who already have the disease. "Vitamin D has widespread benefits for our health and certain chronic diseases in particular," said Sue Penckofer, Ph.D., R.N., and co-author of that study.

It appears that people who have diabetes are generally low in vitamin D, which is also the case with many other diseases. Since vitamin D-deficiency and serious illness are so closely related, many medical professionals are advising people to have their levels checked to be sure they fall within a healthy range. More often than not, people who are acutely ill are deficient in the necessary vitamin.

If one is deficient in the vitamin, it is best to get more sunlight exposure, eat foods with vitamin D, and supplement with vitamin D3 in order to achieve optimal levels.

Sources for this story include:

http://www.google.com/hostednews/uk...

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/art...

Reposted From NaturalNews

No comments:


Our Guardian Angel Ministers To Our Needs

God's Divine Providence

Followers