(NaturalNews)
It's not a new idea that multiple sclerosis
(MS) is somehow tied to sunlight -- or,
rather, the lack of adequate exposure to
sunlight. For more than three decades, researchers
have noted that MS is much more common in
higher latitudes than in the tropics. So,
because bright sunlight is more abundant
near the equator and sunlight exposure results
in the body producing vitamin D, some scientists
have reasoned that increased vitamin D levels
may lower the risk of MS.
In fact,
for those who already have MS, a neurological
disease marked by a deterioration in nerves'
electrical conduction, vitamin D may reduce
their symptoms, according to Hector DeLuca,
the Steenbock Research Professor of Biochemistry
at University of Wisconsin-Madison. However,
in a study just published in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Science (PNAS),
DeLuca and fellow researcher Bryan Becklund
conclude the ultraviolet (UV)
portion of sunlight could play an even more
important role than vitamin D in preventing
and/or controlling the MS.
"Since
the 1970s, a lot of people have believed
that sunlight worked through vitamin D to
reduce MS," DeLuca, one of the world's
top vitamin D researchers, said in a statement
to the media. "It's true that large
doses of the active form of vitamin D can
block the disease in the animal model. That
causes an unacceptably high level of calcium
in the blood, but we know that people at
the equator don't have this high blood calcium,
even though they have a low incidence of
MS. So it seems that something other than
vitamin D could explain this geographic
relationship."
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