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Natural Awakenings Tampa Florida

Treating Multiple Sclerosis and Autoimmune Disease with High Dose Vitamin D

Jul 01, 2017 02:36PM ● By Les Cole, MD

Vitamin D is important for a host of immune functions in your body. Vitamin D is critical to both the development and functions of your immune system. It is known that vitamin D is important in many immune functions that protect you from bacterial, viral and fungal infections. In addition, vitamin D determines your natural killer (NK) cell numbers and function—the cells that attack viral infections and cancer cells. Vitamin D also modulates your helper T cells, reducing inflammatory processes and increasing anti-inflammatory processes.
 
How does this information affect your risk for developing autoimmune disease? It has been known for a long time that certain infections are, and others may be, associated with autoimmune disease. If you have fewer infections, your risk is reduced. What about the effect of NK cells? Viral infections that set up housekeeping in various cells of your body—hepatitis C, HIV, Epstein-Barr & others—increase the risk of autoimmunity (and cancer). So, the better your NK cells work, the less your risk of autoimmune disease (not to mention cancer which can also set off autoimmune disease). Lastly, with low vitamin D, your helper T cells are much more prone to initiate autoimmune processes and inflammation than if your blood levels and “functional levels” of vitamin D are in the high normal range for your body.
 
Low vitamin D and genetic mutations in your vitamin D processing proteins are strongly linked to multiple sclerosis (MS) and most autoimmune diseases. If you have MS or any of a host of autoimmune diseases including rheumatoid arthritis, SLE, Hashimoto’s, psoriasis, vitiligo, and others, your functional levels of vitamin D are most likely low. If your blood levels are low, then higher dosing of vitamin D is important. If your blood levels of vitamin D are high normal and you have a genetic mutation in one or more of your vitamin D processing proteins, then you are likely “functionally deficient” in vitamin D. This means that at the immune cells level, your vitamin D isn’t having an adequate effect, so your immune cells aren’t getting enough vitamin D to help them work properly.
 
What are vitamin D “processing proteins” and how do they affect my risk? Vitamin D has to be processed in order for it to have beneficial effects. First, it is made in your body from cholesterol, then one step requiring UV light occurring in your skin, ultimately leading to vitamin D3 which is measured in the blood. This is not the active form. If there are any reasons for abnormalities up to now, then your blood levels of vitamin D will be low. From this point, vitamin D has to be activated to function in all of your cells, including your immune cells.
You have a protein that converts it to its active form. You have a protein that carries vitamin D in your blood and is itself influential on your immune system. You have a protein vitamin D receptor where the activated vitamin D initiates its effect in your immune cells. And you have a protein that deactivates vitamin D. Each of these can have mutations in them that can increase your risk for MS and autoimmunity even if you have high normal vitamin D blood levels. It does this by decreasing your “functional vitamin D”. Many studies show connections between these mutations, MS and many autoimmune diseases.
 
What can be done about this? If you have MS or any autoimmune disease, you can have certain testing done to see if your vitamin D levels are optimal in your blood. There are other tests that can determine the functional level of your vitamin D if you have vitamin D processing protein mutations. If either your blood or functional levels of vitamin D are low, high dose vitamin D treatment is important.
If you want your vitamin D measured, want to know if you have a vitamin D processing protein mutation, or want help with your MS or autoimmune disease, St. Petersburg Health & Wellness can help.
For a list of autoimmune conditions that are likely associated with low or low functional vitamin D levels, visit aarda.org/disease-list.
For a list of conditions associated with low or low functional vitamin D, including autoimmune illness, cancer, chronic pain, diabetes, heart disease, hyperparathyroidism, hypertension, mental illness, multiple sclerosis, muscle weakness and coordination, obesity and osteoarthritis, visit 
VitamindCouncil.org/health-conditions.
Attend a free seminar on this subject presented by Les Cole, MD, 6 to 7:30 p.m., July 26.
 
Les Cole, MD practices Functional, Anti-aging, Integrative & Preventive Medicine and is certified by the American Academy of Anti-aging Medicine in Functional, Anti-aging and Regenerative Medicine and by the American Board of Integrative and Holistic Medicine. To learn more about treating MS and autoimmune disease with high dose vitamin D along with other topics to help you “Live Well”, call 727-202-6807 and/or visit StPetehw.com. See ad page 10.