Showing posts with label vitamin D. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vitamin D. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 October 2017

Vitamin K and Cardiovascular Function in Teens

Vitamin K and Cardiovascular Function in Teens

When it comes to addressing nutrient deficiencies, magnesium and vitamin D are now well known ones to correct to ensure optimal health. Vitamin K may be just as important as these two but has not yet made it to the general populations attention. Vitamin K deficiency is thought to be as common as magnesium deficiency and when you consider most people don't eat a lot of green leafy vegetables, which contain K1, you can see why. We began taking vitamin K after hearing how important it was to take if you took vitamin D. We take 1 mg a day which is only one cap, as we do eat a fair few green leafy vegetables. This should be the way for addressing most deficiencies, using a combination of food and supplementation. I think too often people rely on supplements alone. Recommendations to to say to take between 1-2 mg per day.

Dr Michael Jurgelewicz, DC, DACBN, DCBCN, CNS said in a recent review of a study conducted on teens and cardiovascular function, "I find that most people need anywhere from 5,000-10,000 IUs/day of vitamin D and about 1-2 mg of K1, since most people do not eat enough vegetables (as seen in this study) to get enough K from diet alone. This is also the amount that carboxylates osteocalcin.

Approximately 70% of my patients have vitamin K insufficiencies. It seems to be as prevalent as magnesium deficiencies. As a general rule of thumb, I never recommend vitamin D without vitamin K. In addition, I have personally have found vitamin K1 supplementation to be much more successful at lowering undercarboxylated osteocalcin levels than K2 (MK-7). It makes sense to supplement with all three forms of vitamin K [K1, K2(MK-4, and MK-7)] and not get hung up on the marketing hype of one proprietary form."

In reviewing the study Dr Michael Jurgelewicz said "the researchers found a 3.3 times greater risk of heart enlargement in healthy teens who consumed the least amount of vitamin K1... Approximately 10% of the teens had some degree of left ventricular hypertrophy, according to the research team. This is the first study exploring associations between vitamin K and heart function and structure in young healthy individuals. These results suggest early interventions to ensure adequate vitamin K1 in young people could improve cardiovascular development as well as reduce future cardiovascular disease risk."

Vitamin K plays a role in blood clotting, optimal bone health, and cardiovascular health as shown above. It is quite cheap and you don't need a lot of it. It is something you can add into your regime if you are deficient and remember to use a combination of food and supplements to replenish. Green leafy vegetables like spinach and cabbage contain good amounts of vitamin K1.


Monday, 13 February 2017

Don't Wait For Your Doctor To Catch Up

Don't Wait For Your Doctor to Catch Up


There are many things we know that make for a healthy body and quality of life. For example the role nutrition plays in health and disease and how important certain vitamins, minerals, and trace elements are such as vitamin D, zinc, magnesium, CoQ10, and fish oil. The sad thing is that your local doctor often dismisses many of these as ways to maintain or improve your health status. For example, it is only now becoming realised how important vitamin D is and how many crucial roles it plays within the body for many of your local GP’s. This has been known for at least 15 years (minimum) within the doctor’s community who are a bit more enlightened and up to date with medical research.

Doctor Tom O’Bryan said “it takes an average of 17 years for research findings to work their way down to your local doctor. The problem is that you don’t have 17 years to waste.” This is why I like to do my best to stay up to date with medical research the best I can. Obviously I am not a scientist and don’t understand every mechanism in the body and how it works inside out but I do my best and I also seek out the doctors who are fully aware of what cutting-edge science is out there. If something makes sense but has not yet been fully validated then I don’t care. I try it out and see how I feel, monitor blood work, and make changes.

Your doctor may have the best intentions but it is very hard for them to stay up to date with the medical research when they are seeing patients all day long and also when much of the current information may not have been taught to them in medical school. This is especially true if they finished more than 10 years ago as research into things like the immune system, environmental toxicities, and epigenetics have progressed so quickly. The good news is there are some local doctors now trying to bridge this gap as they have started to accept that things aren't working as well as they should be.

Another thing that also plays a role in whether you have an issue or not in your doctor’s eyes is if you are “in range” or not on a blood test. This is a very poor marker of health vs disease as the norms on these tests are not about functioning optimally. It is an average of everyone who gets tested, mostly sick people. I have written about this Blood Tests - In Range Doesn't Mean Healthy.

I always get frustrated when I see on the news or hear from people about a certain topic that they think is so new and amazing, when in fact I told them about it 5 to 10 years ago because I have been fortunate to learn from some of the best people in the world in their given fields. At the end of the day, I’m glad they end up coming to the same conclusion. I just hope they haven’t deteriorated too much or accumulated many health issues along the way. I don’t want to simply chase off symptoms or feel ok, I want to function at the best I can each day. Don’t accept mediocrity.