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Date: | Sun, 29 Aug 2004 09:39:36 -0400 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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<<Most of the articles I have read on the need for this supplementation
> state or imply that exclusive breastfeeding can cause an infant to be
> deficient in vitamin D because breastmilk is deficient in vitamin D.>>
my take away message is that it's not a breastmilk issue, but a
lifestyle issue.
<< Babies are
> sunlight deficient due to modern day living and the ignorance of
> parents on this
> issue. Breastmilk is not deficient. Thinking on this issue is
> deficient.>>
but either way, there is a deficiency issue. getting bogged down in
semantics helps no one. i just got a nearly hysterical mom from a
mother who's 14 mo old infant was just dx'ed with rickets. obviously a
few minutes of sun a few times a week wasn't enough in her latitude to
protect her. and rickets is the *end* stage of d deficiency.
<<There
> are many patents on the makings of synthetic vitamin D. Not only do
> researchers
> have an interest in vitamin D but also the US government has interests
> in
> this area, including patenting.>>
synthetic D has other uses, not normal D repletion.
<<And yes certainly it is in high doses unlike what we would
> get in a supplement. >>
mmm hmmm. there is one case of an adult man taking a formulation with
faulty labeling and an error in processing. he was taking something
like a million iu's d per day. yes he did have toxicity. yes he did
recover.
yes, too much D is toxic. more is not better. but sufficient is
mandatory for health, not optimal.
<<I was born in Northern Ontario Canada and
> my mother took me outside even during the winter months (she couldn't
> get me to
> take cod liver oil-I spit it out most times). >>
if you've read the vitamin D research, krispin sullivan's papers on D
and various others, you'd know that latitude, there simply isn't
sufficient D from sunlight exposure 6-9 mo per year. and the amount of
skin that needs to be covered to protect from exposure would be
prohibitive even if there was.
katherine in atl
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