Inflammation Mastery, 4th Edition = 1200 pages + 30h video: Efficient and Effective Treatment of a Wide Range of Common Diseases based on DrV's Functional Inflammology Protocol (video) and Expert-level medical-clinical integration (video).
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Vitamin D Research News, Perspectives, Context and Clinical Applications
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Citation reviewed herein: Kimball SM, Mirhosseini N, Holick MF. Evaluation of vitamin D3 intakes up to 15,000 international units/day and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations up to 300 nmol/L on calcium metabolism in a community setting. Dermatoendocrinol 2017 Apr 13;9(1):e1300213. doi: 10.1080/19381980.2017.1300213 Download PDF here
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Reviewed here by: Alex Vasquez DC ND DO FACN
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Date of review/posting: 24 May 2017
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Overall evaluation of this publication: Excellent, definitely contributes to our understanding of the safety and pharmacology of vitamin D supplementation and how we have to use higher doses in the obese
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Key points quoted with commentary:
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This primary research included data from nearly 4,000 participants who were supplementing with vitamin D3. DrV: Very large group; although this was not a controlled trial, the data is significant and is representative of real-world clinical practice.
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"To achieve serum 25(OH)D levels >100 nmol/L on average, required vitamin D intakes of 6,000 IU/d for normal Body Mass Index (BMI), 7,000 IU/d for overweight and 8,000 IU/d for
obese." DrV: We have known for many years that obese patients were likely to require additional vitamin D because higher doses would be required to saturate excess adiposity; this study provides a quantification of this increased need so that clinicians and patients can use proper dosing. -
"Doses of vitamin D in excess of 6,000 IU/d were required to achieve serum 25(OH)D concentrations above 100 nmol/L, especially in individuals who were overweight or obese without any evidence of toxicity. Serum 25(OH)D concentrations up to 300 nmol/L were found to be safe." DrV: This documents 1) the increased need of vitamin D in the obese and also 2) excellent safety.
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"Nearly every cell in the body has a vitamin D receptor and vitamin D is necessary for a myriad of cellular functions. In fact, low vitamin D status reduces the capacity of most tissues to carry out normal physiologic functions." DrV: This is a clear and excellent summary sentence.
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"An adult in a bathing suit exposed to an amount of sunlight that causes a slight pinkness to the skin 24 hours later (1 minimal erythemal dose; MED) is equivalent to ingesting approximately 15,000 IUs of vitamin D." DrV: Again, excellent articulation of real-world physiology for clinical perspective and context.
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"Vitamin D3 intakes of at least 6,000 IU/d were required for those with a normal BMI to achieve serum 25(OH)D concentrations above 100 nmol/L, or 7,000 IU/d and 8,000 IU/d for overweight and obese, respectively." DrV: Same as above: very helpful clarity here.
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"...serum 25(OH)D and vitamin D dose were negative predictors of serum calcium." DrV: Excellent refutation of the idea that higher vitamin D = higher serum calcium. One of the main statements by those who discourage vitamin D supplementation is that routine physiologic supplementation is going to lead to higher levels of calcium in serum (where it could promote calcification of tissues) and in urine (where it could promote development of kidney stones); in this research, both of those were disproven.
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"Urine calcium and creatinine measurements were available for 521 participants. Hypercalciuria (urine calcium:creatinine >0.2 mg/mg) was detected in 17.6% of participants at baseline. There was virtually no increase in the prevalence of hypercalciuria at follow-up (17.7%)." DrV: Again, excellent refutation of the idea that higher vitamin D = higher serum calcium. One of the main statements by those who discourage vitamin D supplementation is that routine physiologic supplementation is going to lead to higher levels of calcium in serum (where it could promote calcification of tissues) and in urine (where it could promote development of kidney stones); in this research, both of those were disproven.
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"While the present study does not address what is an optimal vitamin D status, it does confirm the safety of serum 25(OH)D concentrations up to 300 nmol/L and intakes of vitamin D up
to 15,000 IU/d." DrV:
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Clinical applications/significance: Clinicians and patients should feel comfortable using higher physiologic doses of vitamin D, especially doses up to 10,000 IU per day; this does not mean that such doses will be perfectly tolerated by all patients but it does suggest that these doses will be generally safe for most people. Note that the efficacy of this study is that of dose-response relationships rather than disease-treatment efficacy; the latter is largely dependent on the former.
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Download original article: Download PDF here
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Download compilation of DrV's vitamin D articles/excerpts: HERE
Download a compilation of DrV's
vitamin D articles and excerpts by clicking any of the first 4 images and icons below
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Overview (Part 1) of the Functional Inflammology Protocol
Dr Vasquez introduces the "Functional Inflammology Protocol" at the 2013 International Conference on Human Nutrition and Functional Medicine (PDF brochure)
Dr Vasquez's "functional inflammology protocol", famously recalled by the FINDSEX ® acronym, is reviewed in this presentation for its application to the three general types of inflammatory diseases/responses: 1) metabolic inflammation, including glial activation and emphasizing the component of mitochondrial dysfunction, 2) allergic inflammation, including asthma and eczema, and 3) autoimmune inflammation, including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, and the many other conditions that Dr Vasquez has detailed in his books starting in 2004 (Integrative Orthopedics) and 2006 (Integrative Rheumatology.
New publication 2016: Inflammation Mastery 4th Edition
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Not simply a "book": 1,182 pages in color + more than 20 hours of video access
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Discount via ICHNFM.ORG: US$170 plus shipping and handling (retail: US$250 plus shipping and handling)
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Updates: Includes and bypasses everything from the previous editions published as Integrative Rheumatology (2), Naturopathic Rheumatology, Functional Inflammology and Functional Medicine Rheumatology; complete overhaul/expansion/update of the migraine and fibromyalgia protocols.
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Inflammation Mastery 4th Edition provides everything from laboratory interpretation to the details of fatty acid biochemistry and mitochondrial dysfunction and hormonal imbalances/correction in one convenient location with a complete index. Also available as a two-volume set titled Textbook of Clinical Nutrition and Functional Medicine.
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Peer-reviewed: Yes, as you can see in the large PDF sample on page 6; see also:
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Dr Vasquez, "Mitochondrial Nutrition in Primary Care" Integrative Medicine 2014
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Dr Vasquez, "Western Diet in Inflammatory Autoimmune Diseases” Current Allergy and Asthma Reports 2014
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Dr Vasquez, "Neuroinflammation in fibromyalgia and CRPS is multifactorial" Nature Reviews Rheumatology 2016; full-text of this article is printed in the book
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Dr Vasquez, "The Clinical Importance of Vitamin D (Cholecalciferol): A Paradigm Shift with Implications for All Healthcare Providers" Altern Ther Health Med. 2004
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Dr Vasquez, "Understanding Functional Medicine by Appreciating the Web-like Interconnections of Physiologic Factors" Integrative Medicine 2006
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