› Forums › Cutaneous Melanoma Community › Medical proof vitamin D kills cancer cells
- This topic has 12 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 12 years, 6 months ago by
Gene_S.
- Post
-
- February 17, 2013 at 5:12 pm
http://www.naturalhealth365.com/natural_healing/cancer-cell.html
February 16, 2013 by Jonathan Landsman
Filed under Natural Cures, Natural Healinghttp://www.naturalhealth365.com/natural_healing/cancer-cell.html
February 16, 2013 by Jonathan Landsman
Filed under Natural Cures, Natural HealingSat. Feb. 16, 2013 by Blanche Levine
(NaturalHealth365) It’s true – vitamin D kills cancer cells! Best of all, here is a medical report you can’t afford to ignore. Scientists have recently uncovered a so called experimental approach to treating inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), a rare and aggressive form of the disease.
The new approach uses the active form of vitamin D3, calcitriol, which is delivered by quantum dots to IBC tumors. Quantum dots are engineered, miniscule delivery vehicles which can maneuver directly to a tumor site.
New technology uses nature to destroy cancer cells
Our skin can actually manufacture enough levels of calcitriol (vitamin D) in as little as 15 minutes of sunlight per 24 hours.
What will hinder this process is sunscreen and how dark we are, the darker the pigmentation of the skin the more sunlight that is needed. Obesity, also curtails the circulation of vitamin D and age reduces the ability to manufacture vitamin D.
Vitamin D is found in foods, but the human body synthesizes most of this nutrient from sunlight. Since we now get so little in the way of unhindered sunlight, the new approch is to use Quantum dots and engineered light-emitting nanoscale delivery. The study shows that dots can be used to rapidly move high concentrations of calcitriol to targeted tumor sites where cancer cells are located.
They can go through the lymphatic system where the cancer finds its path to spread. So now calcitriol can fight cancer on different fronts. As more studies keep pilling up to support the notion that low vitamin D levels promote breast cancer – pharmaceutical companies are developing altered vitamin D molecules.
Low vitamin D levels could be a death sentence
Breast cancer patients with low levels of vitamin D have more aggressive tumors and poorer outcomes, a new study finds. Experts say the new findings support what many oncologists have long suspected.
“There has been suspicion that vitamin D is related to breast health in some way, although the particular pathway is still unknown,” noted Dr. Laurie Kirstein, a breast surgeon at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City.
“Many oncologists are already following vitamin D levels in their breast cancer patients, and recommending supplements for low levels,” added Kirstein, who was not involved in the new study.
Researchers Jeremy Bonor, Rachel Schaefer, and Ania Nohe wanted to see if they could deliver high concentrations of vitamin D to tumors in mice using quantum dots. By the way, women with a low level of vitamin D at the time of diagnosis are 94 percent more likely to have their cancer spread and 73 percent less likely to reach the 10 year survival mark.
Nanotechnology works at the molecular level, and quantum dots are tiny light-emitting crystals that can be engineered to seek out a particular disease or type of cell. The quantum dots were used as an experiment with mice. So the advice of the medical experts is don’t run to the doctor for this yet, as it may take years to make this available to the public.
But, sunlight is available now to boost immunity; protect us from colds; the flu and now even cancer. So, let’s be honest, it can’t hurt to add (if needed) a high quality, vitamin D supplement to our daily routine. Help us spread the word – share this article with family and friends.
About the author: Blanche Levine has been a student of natural healing modalities for the last 25 years. She has the privilege of working with some of the greatest minds in natural healing including Naturopaths, scientist and energy healers. Having seen people miraculously heal from all kinds of dis-ease through non-invasive methods, her passion now is to help people become aware of what it takes to be healthy.
Sources:
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-02/aiop-qdd020113.php
http://health.usnews.com/health-news/family-health/cancer/articles/2011/04/29/low-vitamin-d-levels-linked-to-more-aggressive-breast-cancers
http://www.vitamindcouncil.org/quantum-dots-deliver-vitamin-d-to-tumors-for-breast-cancer-treatmentSUBSCRIBE TODAY! Click here to join the NaturalNews Inner Circle – a monthly (online) subscription offering exclusive audio interviews, video events, natural health product discounts, free gifts plus much more!
- Replies
-
-
- February 18, 2013 at 12:12 pm
Hello Gene,
Thankyou for posting yet another great piece on vitamin D. I love awaiting your posts. I have a sister who is stage 3C and I try and find out what ever I can for her to help her deal with this awful disease. She is eating healty and getting small little doses of sun when she can just enough to raise her Vitamin D levels, and she is two years out from her surgery with 5 positive lymph nodes and she is doing great at the moment and feeling good. Gene do you think there is any benefit in the sunbeds for vitamin d, as I too like reading DR. Joseph Mercola and have adopted many changes that he advocates, basically eating healthy and getting moderate excercise, but he thinks sunbeds are ok if used correctly I would love to know if you had any PERSONAL thoughts on the matter. Thankyou.
-
- February 18, 2013 at 12:12 pm
Hello Gene,
Thankyou for posting yet another great piece on vitamin D. I love awaiting your posts. I have a sister who is stage 3C and I try and find out what ever I can for her to help her deal with this awful disease. She is eating healty and getting small little doses of sun when she can just enough to raise her Vitamin D levels, and she is two years out from her surgery with 5 positive lymph nodes and she is doing great at the moment and feeling good. Gene do you think there is any benefit in the sunbeds for vitamin d, as I too like reading DR. Joseph Mercola and have adopted many changes that he advocates, basically eating healthy and getting moderate excercise, but he thinks sunbeds are ok if used correctly I would love to know if you had any PERSONAL thoughts on the matter. Thankyou.
-
- February 18, 2013 at 12:12 pm
Hello Gene,
Thankyou for posting yet another great piece on vitamin D. I love awaiting your posts. I have a sister who is stage 3C and I try and find out what ever I can for her to help her deal with this awful disease. She is eating healty and getting small little doses of sun when she can just enough to raise her Vitamin D levels, and she is two years out from her surgery with 5 positive lymph nodes and she is doing great at the moment and feeling good. Gene do you think there is any benefit in the sunbeds for vitamin d, as I too like reading DR. Joseph Mercola and have adopted many changes that he advocates, basically eating healthy and getting moderate excercise, but he thinks sunbeds are ok if used correctly I would love to know if you had any PERSONAL thoughts on the matter. Thankyou.
-
- February 19, 2013 at 6:16 pm
Most people don't realize that there are different types of sunbeds. If you could locate one that Dr. Mercola has recommended then I would use that one.
A very good website for health news is http://www.naturalnews.com/001263_phototherapy_vitamin_d.html
Sign up for the free daily email.
There is a DVD that may be of interest to you named Healing Cancer from Inside Out you can read the review at http://www.vegparadise.com/media13.html (not pushing to being a vegetarian) just a good review about a great DVD.
Best wishes and good luck. Gene
-
- February 19, 2013 at 6:16 pm
Most people don't realize that there are different types of sunbeds. If you could locate one that Dr. Mercola has recommended then I would use that one.
A very good website for health news is http://www.naturalnews.com/001263_phototherapy_vitamin_d.html
Sign up for the free daily email.
There is a DVD that may be of interest to you named Healing Cancer from Inside Out you can read the review at http://www.vegparadise.com/media13.html (not pushing to being a vegetarian) just a good review about a great DVD.
Best wishes and good luck. Gene
-
- February 19, 2013 at 6:16 pm
Most people don't realize that there are different types of sunbeds. If you could locate one that Dr. Mercola has recommended then I would use that one.
A very good website for health news is http://www.naturalnews.com/001263_phototherapy_vitamin_d.html
Sign up for the free daily email.
There is a DVD that may be of interest to you named Healing Cancer from Inside Out you can read the review at http://www.vegparadise.com/media13.html (not pushing to being a vegetarian) just a good review about a great DVD.
Best wishes and good luck. Gene
-
- February 21, 2013 at 7:34 pm
Thankyou for replying to me Gene, I read all the articles you suggested and am most certainly a vitamin d fan.
I found the sunbeds Dr. Mercola suggested and he seems keen on the electronic ballasts type as these deliver the best uvb to uva ratio. I hope you are keeping well and look forward to your posts. Thanks again
-
- February 21, 2013 at 7:34 pm
Thankyou for replying to me Gene, I read all the articles you suggested and am most certainly a vitamin d fan.
I found the sunbeds Dr. Mercola suggested and he seems keen on the electronic ballasts type as these deliver the best uvb to uva ratio. I hope you are keeping well and look forward to your posts. Thanks again
-
- February 21, 2013 at 7:34 pm
Thankyou for replying to me Gene, I read all the articles you suggested and am most certainly a vitamin d fan.
I found the sunbeds Dr. Mercola suggested and he seems keen on the electronic ballasts type as these deliver the best uvb to uva ratio. I hope you are keeping well and look forward to your posts. Thanks again
-
- February 21, 2013 at 9:18 pm
Thanks for your reply… some more info
———————————————————-
Exposure to sun 'may help people with cancer survive'
Sunbathing warnings may have been too simplistic, say scientistsSunbathing is known to cause skin cancer – but it may also help people survive when they get it, scientists are reporting.Two studies published yesterday showed that vitamin D produced by the action of the sun on the skin may help improve survival for patients with skin and bowel cancer.
The bizarre finding suggests that health warnings to avoid the sun have been too simplistic. Some exposure to the sun is necessary for health – it is excessive exposure leading to burning of the skin that does the damage.
A research team from the University of Leeds working with the US National Institutes of Health found a high level of vitamin D – suggestive of high sun exposure – protected patients with malignant melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.
Those with the lowest levels of the vitamin D in their blood at the time of diagnosis were 30 per cent more likely to suffer a recurrence of the disease after treatment than those who had the highest levels.
Patients with the highest levels of the vitamin also had the thinnest tumours at diagnosis. Results of the study, funded by Cancer Research UK and the NIH, are published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
The findings add to the growing body of evidence that boosting levels of vitamin D could protect against a wide range of diseases, or extend survival with them. The gloomy weather and long winter in countries north of 30 degrees latitude, such as the UK, means that a large part of the earth's population is deficient in the vitamin between October and March. The weight of evidence has grown so dramatically that governments around the world are reviewing their recommendations on the minimum recommended limits.
Professor Julia Newton Bishop, of the Leeds Institute of Molecular Medicine, who led the melanoma study, said: "It is common for people to have low levels of vitamin D in many countries. Melanoma patients tend to avoid the sun as sunburn is known to increase the risk of the disease.
"Our results suggest that melanoma patients may need to get vitamin D by eating fatty fish or by taking supplements to ensure they have normal levels."
Professor Newton Bishop warned against excessive use of vitamin D supplements, however. "There is some evidence from other studies that high levels of vitamin D are also harmful. So we should aim for a normal level rather than a very high one."
In the second study, researchers led by Professor Kimmie Ng, from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, US, who followed more than 1,000 bowel cancer patients for nine years, found those with the highest level of vitamin D were half as likely to die from the disease compared with those with the lowest levels. The results are published in the British Journal of Cancer.
Sara Hiom, director of health information at Cancer Research UK, which funded the study, said: "The key is to get the right balance between the amount of time spent in the sun and the levels of vitamin D needed for good health.
"Protection from burning in the sun is still vital. People with lots of moles, red hair, fair skin and a family history of the disease should take extra care as they are more at risk."
Vitamin D: Man-made healer
Vitamin D is the only vitamin that humans make themselves and is essential for the health of skin and bones. It has attracted increasing attention in recent years as its role in preventing cancer and other conditions including heart disease, diabetes and multiple sclerosis, has been revealed. Some experts believe the benefits of the Mediterranean diet may have as much to do with sun as with the regional food. An increasing body of cancer and other medical experts say a healthy intake of vitamin D for people in the UK and northern Europe should be five to 10 times higher than the current recommended blood levels of 200 to 600 International Units a day, depending on age. Others have suggested high levels may not be protective, and could even be dangerous.
———————– ————————————————————-
article found at http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/exposure-to-sun-may-help-people-with-cancer-survive-1791166.html
-
- February 21, 2013 at 9:18 pm
Thanks for your reply… some more info
———————————————————-
Exposure to sun 'may help people with cancer survive'
Sunbathing warnings may have been too simplistic, say scientistsSunbathing is known to cause skin cancer – but it may also help people survive when they get it, scientists are reporting.Two studies published yesterday showed that vitamin D produced by the action of the sun on the skin may help improve survival for patients with skin and bowel cancer.
The bizarre finding suggests that health warnings to avoid the sun have been too simplistic. Some exposure to the sun is necessary for health – it is excessive exposure leading to burning of the skin that does the damage.
A research team from the University of Leeds working with the US National Institutes of Health found a high level of vitamin D – suggestive of high sun exposure – protected patients with malignant melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.
Those with the lowest levels of the vitamin D in their blood at the time of diagnosis were 30 per cent more likely to suffer a recurrence of the disease after treatment than those who had the highest levels.
Patients with the highest levels of the vitamin also had the thinnest tumours at diagnosis. Results of the study, funded by Cancer Research UK and the NIH, are published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
The findings add to the growing body of evidence that boosting levels of vitamin D could protect against a wide range of diseases, or extend survival with them. The gloomy weather and long winter in countries north of 30 degrees latitude, such as the UK, means that a large part of the earth's population is deficient in the vitamin between October and March. The weight of evidence has grown so dramatically that governments around the world are reviewing their recommendations on the minimum recommended limits.
Professor Julia Newton Bishop, of the Leeds Institute of Molecular Medicine, who led the melanoma study, said: "It is common for people to have low levels of vitamin D in many countries. Melanoma patients tend to avoid the sun as sunburn is known to increase the risk of the disease.
"Our results suggest that melanoma patients may need to get vitamin D by eating fatty fish or by taking supplements to ensure they have normal levels."
Professor Newton Bishop warned against excessive use of vitamin D supplements, however. "There is some evidence from other studies that high levels of vitamin D are also harmful. So we should aim for a normal level rather than a very high one."
In the second study, researchers led by Professor Kimmie Ng, from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, US, who followed more than 1,000 bowel cancer patients for nine years, found those with the highest level of vitamin D were half as likely to die from the disease compared with those with the lowest levels. The results are published in the British Journal of Cancer.
Sara Hiom, director of health information at Cancer Research UK, which funded the study, said: "The key is to get the right balance between the amount of time spent in the sun and the levels of vitamin D needed for good health.
"Protection from burning in the sun is still vital. People with lots of moles, red hair, fair skin and a family history of the disease should take extra care as they are more at risk."
Vitamin D: Man-made healer
Vitamin D is the only vitamin that humans make themselves and is essential for the health of skin and bones. It has attracted increasing attention in recent years as its role in preventing cancer and other conditions including heart disease, diabetes and multiple sclerosis, has been revealed. Some experts believe the benefits of the Mediterranean diet may have as much to do with sun as with the regional food. An increasing body of cancer and other medical experts say a healthy intake of vitamin D for people in the UK and northern Europe should be five to 10 times higher than the current recommended blood levels of 200 to 600 International Units a day, depending on age. Others have suggested high levels may not be protective, and could even be dangerous.
———————– ————————————————————-
article found at http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/exposure-to-sun-may-help-people-with-cancer-survive-1791166.html
-
- February 21, 2013 at 9:18 pm
Thanks for your reply… some more info
———————————————————-
Exposure to sun 'may help people with cancer survive'
Sunbathing warnings may have been too simplistic, say scientistsSunbathing is known to cause skin cancer – but it may also help people survive when they get it, scientists are reporting.Two studies published yesterday showed that vitamin D produced by the action of the sun on the skin may help improve survival for patients with skin and bowel cancer.
The bizarre finding suggests that health warnings to avoid the sun have been too simplistic. Some exposure to the sun is necessary for health – it is excessive exposure leading to burning of the skin that does the damage.
A research team from the University of Leeds working with the US National Institutes of Health found a high level of vitamin D – suggestive of high sun exposure – protected patients with malignant melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.
Those with the lowest levels of the vitamin D in their blood at the time of diagnosis were 30 per cent more likely to suffer a recurrence of the disease after treatment than those who had the highest levels.
Patients with the highest levels of the vitamin also had the thinnest tumours at diagnosis. Results of the study, funded by Cancer Research UK and the NIH, are published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
The findings add to the growing body of evidence that boosting levels of vitamin D could protect against a wide range of diseases, or extend survival with them. The gloomy weather and long winter in countries north of 30 degrees latitude, such as the UK, means that a large part of the earth's population is deficient in the vitamin between October and March. The weight of evidence has grown so dramatically that governments around the world are reviewing their recommendations on the minimum recommended limits.
Professor Julia Newton Bishop, of the Leeds Institute of Molecular Medicine, who led the melanoma study, said: "It is common for people to have low levels of vitamin D in many countries. Melanoma patients tend to avoid the sun as sunburn is known to increase the risk of the disease.
"Our results suggest that melanoma patients may need to get vitamin D by eating fatty fish or by taking supplements to ensure they have normal levels."
Professor Newton Bishop warned against excessive use of vitamin D supplements, however. "There is some evidence from other studies that high levels of vitamin D are also harmful. So we should aim for a normal level rather than a very high one."
In the second study, researchers led by Professor Kimmie Ng, from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, US, who followed more than 1,000 bowel cancer patients for nine years, found those with the highest level of vitamin D were half as likely to die from the disease compared with those with the lowest levels. The results are published in the British Journal of Cancer.
Sara Hiom, director of health information at Cancer Research UK, which funded the study, said: "The key is to get the right balance between the amount of time spent in the sun and the levels of vitamin D needed for good health.
"Protection from burning in the sun is still vital. People with lots of moles, red hair, fair skin and a family history of the disease should take extra care as they are more at risk."
Vitamin D: Man-made healer
Vitamin D is the only vitamin that humans make themselves and is essential for the health of skin and bones. It has attracted increasing attention in recent years as its role in preventing cancer and other conditions including heart disease, diabetes and multiple sclerosis, has been revealed. Some experts believe the benefits of the Mediterranean diet may have as much to do with sun as with the regional food. An increasing body of cancer and other medical experts say a healthy intake of vitamin D for people in the UK and northern Europe should be five to 10 times higher than the current recommended blood levels of 200 to 600 International Units a day, depending on age. Others have suggested high levels may not be protective, and could even be dangerous.
———————– ————————————————————-
article found at http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/exposure-to-sun-may-help-people-with-cancer-survive-1791166.html
-
Tagged: cutaneous melanoma
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.