Editor Emeritus on June 1st, 2011

The June 2011 ezine edition of The Health Gazette will be published as scheduled today.

This month we have Part 9 in our series on The Dimensions of Health. Part 9 provides a brief introduction to our next dimension: mental health.

Why not come and join us? You can catch up on the series in the Subscriber Archive.

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Editor Emeritus on May 27th, 2011

Medical researchers in India studied a range of herbs for their antibiotic properties in challenging clinical situations. They chose a research population of patients undergoing treatment for oral cancers. The cancer treatment results in impairment of the immune system (not exactly an ideal outcome for anyone, much less for cancer patients, but that is another matter), making patients highly susceptible to infections which are difficult to treat.

Infections in immunosuppressed patients can result in life-threatening secondary infections from bacteria and fungi, especially since bacteria, like Staphylococcus aureus for example, are becoming multi-drug resistant (the so termed MRSA infections). Thus, researchers from Rohtak, India, tested extracts from several plants used in traditional or folk medicine against microbials found in the mouths of oral cancer patients.

Of the 40 patients involved in the study, 35 had compromised immune systems with severely reduced white cell counts. Eight of the plants tested were able to significantly affect the growth of organisms collected by oral swab, and pure cultures of bacteria and fungi grown in the lab. This included wild asparagus, desert date, false daisy, curry tree, caster oil plant and fenugreek.

Dr Jaya Parkash Yadav said, “Natural medicines are increasingly important in treating disease and traditional knowledge provides a starting point in the search for plant-based medicines. Importantly we found that the extraction process had a huge effect on both the specificity and efficacy of the plant extracts against microbes. Nevertheless several of the plants tested were broad spectrum antibiotics able to combat bacteria including E. coli, S. aureus and the fungi Candida and Aspergillus. Both desert date and caster oil plant were especially able to target bacteria, such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which are known to be difficult to treat with conventional antibiotics.”

Dr Yadav also stated that, “Although the plants tested had a lower potency than conventional antibiotics they offer hope against resistant species. These results are a starting point for further testing in the lab and clinic.”

The research will be published as follows:

Manju Panghal, Vivek Kaushal and Jaya Parkash Yadav, In vitro antimicrobial activity of ten medicinal plants against clinical isolates of oral cancer cases, Annals of Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobials (in press).

Readers may also be interested in an earlier article: Natural Antibiotics

 

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Editor Emeritus on May 24th, 2011

Dr John Cannell of The Vitamin D Council writes:

While I am not planning on researching and publishing any more theories in peer reviewed journals, new scientific theories on vitamin D are waiting to be written.  For example, take one of the most common medical conditions in the USA, heartburn or GERD.  It involves a dysfunctional weakened muscle (esophageal sphincter) at the base of the esophagus.  Treatment is geared to stopping the side effects of this weak muscle, not strengthening the muscle itself. Like similar muscles in the bladder, which increase the risk of urinary incontinence in vitamin D deficient women, I suspect, and hereby theorize, that the esophageal muscle is weakened by vitamin D deficiency.  If any researchers are reading this, it is an easy correlation to do with whatever cohort you have access to, GERD symptoms or GERD diagnosis compared with 25(OH)D levels. (I understand if you don’t credit me as first theorizing it.)

If any lay people are reading this, and you have, or used to have, GERD or heartburn, please email me a letter to this email address (vitamindcouncil@vitamindcouncil.org), telling me about heartburn before and after vitamin D, that is, did vitamin D (5,000 IU/day or more) appear to have an effect on the heartburn, one way or another?

John Cannell, MD
Vitamin D Council
1241 Johnson Ave., #134
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

Become a member of the Vitamin D Council.

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Editor Emeritus on May 23rd, 2011

Dr John Cannell of The Vitamin D Council shares some interesting correspondence below:

Two More Autism Letters

In the last few weeks, I received the two letters below. I was so glad to find out that I may be wrong, that adults with autism – not just young children – may be helped with vitamin D.

Dear Dr. Cannell:

We talked a couple months back about my autistic 3 year old son (now 4).  As you suggested, I began giving him 5000 IU of Vitamin D daily.  Since starting the vitamin D, I have seen the following improvements;

1.    Larry is now sleeping through the night which has a tremendous positive impact on functioning throughout the day.  (as well as the functioning of the rest of the family).  He does take a sleeping medication as well.  I do think the D has had a positive effect on the length and quality of his sleep.  He no longer wakes several times throughout the night and sleeps the proper amount of time.  He wakes up with a smile.

2.   He definitely has more eye contact.  He is mostly “present” and aware of his environment.  He seems to pay more attention to what is going on around him.

3.   He has started a picture program to help him communicate.  He was having slow progress with this at school.  He started additional home therapy a little after he started the vitamin D.  He now communicates very well with a variety of picture cards including cookie, outside and music.  When he can’t find his card, he attempts to communicate in an alternative way.

4.   He smiles much more.  Along with the eye contact, we have had a lovely increase in smiles and giggles.  He used to have violent episodes.  He is on a behavior medication but since starting the D he seems to be more emotionally engaged with others and his environment.

5.   He seems to listen more and respond to his name.  This one seemed to start when we started the D and home therapy.  I can be outside with him and if he wanders off, I call his name and he responds by stopping, listening and generally following the directions to come back.  I can ask him to do simple tasks like throw a wrapper in the garbage of turn off the light and he will do it.  He will even hold my hand and walk into stores with me.

6.   He has been interacting a little more with his older brother (18 months older).  When his brother pays attention to him, Larry lights up and seems excited, smiles and jumps up and down.

7.   He initiates more physical contact with others, spontaneously giving hugs or just being close.

Thank you so much, we have hope again.

Will he ever be “normal?”

Sincerely,

Jan

Dear Jan,

I am so pleased. Such dramatic improvement after only two months is a sign that improvement may continue. This appears to me to be evidence that Larry’s genes are not structurally damaged, but before the vitamin D, the involved genes did not have enough of their messenger system (vitamin D) to properly express themselves. Yes, he may be “normal,” whatever that is, I just don’t know. I am hoping for a Larry who is happy and able to learn like other children.  What his brain needs now is time, time to heal from the genetic, inflammatory, autoimmune disorder that we call autism. A recent South Korean study implies the rate is now almost one child in 35, an epidemic that may bankrupt our medical and civil services soon unless pregnant women and young children start taking the correct amount of vitamin D.

Be sure that he takes no excess retinol, such a retinyl acetate or retinyl palmitate, and no cod liver oil.  He also needs approximately 125 mg of magnesium, 5 mg of zinc, 2 mg of boron, and at least 80 mcg of vitamin K2, the vitamin D cofactors Americans often lack.  Seeds and nuts are good source of all but the K2, which is usually taken as a supplement. Trader Joe sells sunflower and almond butter that autistic kids seem to like.

Obtain a 25-hydroxy-vitamin D in two months with the target range being high normal, around 80-100 ng/ml.  He may require more than 5,000 IU/day to obtain such blood levels.

Stay in touch and let me know his 25(OH)D and his progress. You have my cell phone number, call me whenever you have questions.

Sincerely,

John Cannell

Dear Dr. Cannell:

I have a 19 year old boy with autism. I include a brief summary of Jake’s development with the hope of helping with his data collection.  I have tape from before the vitamin D and I will tape Jake now so we can have video proof of this amazing change.  And, oh yes, don’t give up on the adults.  My favorite saying is “everyone can always do better.”

Jake is a 19 year old young man with regressive autism, having been born perfectly normal, and actually progressed ahead of schedule until a series of ear infections, oral antibiotics, immunizations, and an exposure to the wild virus strain of chicken pox caused Jake to suffer a loss of language, eye contact, joint attention, behavioral self-modulation, and a general ability to verbally communicate his needs, problems, and pain. He developed a severe and persistent gastrointestinal overgrowth of yeast, alternating constipation and diarrhea, food allergies, seasonal allergies, enterocolitis, and lymphoid hyperplasia, that could be so painfully debilitating that it caused him to cry and scream, try to find physically comfortable positions, and miss many days of school.

Jake has been maintained on a strict casein and gluten free diet for 6 years, with variable and minor improvement. He continued to battle chronic yeast overgrowth, clostridia, and alternating diarrhea and constipation, abdominal pain, gas, bloating, and failed to progress in terms of acquisition of social and language skills, to the degree it seemed he should. His tantruming, mood changes, and behavioral outbursts, in retrospect, were essentially all related to his state of bowel function and discomfort.

Treatments have been somewhat helpful, such as oral immunoglobulin, B12 injections, complex supplementation, however his progress has been at a standstill and his language has not had any major improvements in 7 years.  Although he can express his most basic needs, conversation is extremely difficult for him.

I started supplementing with Vitamin D, 2000 IU a day, on April 15 and have increased his dose to 6000 IU a day just last week.  It seemed that he was having a bit more language on just the 2000 IU but it was hard to tell.  Last week, after he had been on 6,000 IU for several weeks, it seemed as if everyone began to notice.  Just yesterday I received a call from his staff that was so excited to report that “Jake cannot stop talking”.

We are seeing the same improvement at home.  Not only talk but singing as well.  The complex language is amazing, he asked me “why would you limit that”  and when he told me he had a bad dream he said ” I’m crying because I had a bad dream that I got sick and died”.  Prior to this I would have just assumed that he woke crying because his stomach was bothering him.  He would have never been able to explain his problem in fact I didn’t even realize he knew the concept of a dream.  Today I increased his dose to 10,000 IU per day.  I’ll keep him on this dose for several weeks before running another level.  His first level was 17 ng/ml.

Thanks again, Dr. Cannell, I’ll keep you updated on his progress.

With warmest regards, and gratitude for your work.

Mary

Dear Mary:

Somewhere in a previous newsletter, I wrongly predicted (I hope) that older autistic subjects would not respond to vitamin D.  Obviously, one case report does not prove the point but now I believe all autistic adults should start taking 10,000 IU per day immediately. My reasoning is simple, 10,000 IU/day will not harm autistic adults and it may help, it is just that simple.

Obtain a 25(OH)D in two months and adjust the dose as need to obtain levels of 80-100 ng/ml. Never have I been so glad that I was wrong.

Also, be it autistic child or autistic adult, if you want to bring your loved one to our new free clinic, but can’t afford the travel costs, maybe lifetime donors will allow some of their donation to be used for travel.  I can certainly coach you via email and phone.  It is not that difficult to get one’s vitamin D level into the high range of normal while avoiding excess preformed retinol.

Mary, you have my phone number, call if you have questions, and let me know his responses and the blood test results.

Sincerely,

John Cannell

New Phase of My Life

As of July 1st, I will enter a new phase of my life.  I will stop publishing peer-reviewed scientific papers and concentrate on getting vitamin D into the brains of autistic children. This will involve everything from treating children at the free clinic, public speaking about vitamin D and autism, running public service announcements on TV and radio, supporting the autism and vitamin D study at UCSF, and trying to get Congressional hearings on vitamin D and autism.  For that reason, from now on, please videotape your autistic child before starting the vitamin D and again six months after obtaining a blood levels of 80-100 ng/ml.  I may ask you to testify in the future, hopefully in Washington DC; before and after videotapes would be powerful testimony.

However, the free clinic, even with my time entirely donated, costs money.  Please help us.

Become a member of the Vitamin D Council.

John Cannell, MD
Vitamin D Council
1241 Johnson Ave., #134
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

Editor Emeritus on May 22nd, 2011

On July 1, 2011, the Vitamin D Council is planning to begin a free clinic for children with autism. My time will be free, the autism assessment scales will be free, the blood tests will be free, and the vitamin D for the kids will be free (due to the generosity of Ddrops). We estimate 3-4 clinic visits will be needed.  Anyone in the world with a child with autism can call and get an appointment to see me. The Vitamin D Council will sponsor this clinic as long as we can afford it, which means as long as we have enough donors, members and especially enough lifetime members. From now on, a lifetime membership also means that such membership sponsors one autistic child to come to the free clinic and we will encourage that family (if the donor wants) to call and thank the donor in person.

We are taking a risk, as our financial situation is – as it is too often – precarious. In order to have a free clinic we must hire an administrative assistant to organize and help with the free clinic. Therefore, I will no longer be getting any salary from the Vitamin D Council. This also helps with conflicts of interest. However, we still have to pay a full time web director, a science advisor, a controller, another 6 months on our $40,000.00 contract with Minervation to finish the new website (coming any day), and a commitment to fund a $20,000 preliminary study on autism and vitamin D by the University of California at San Francisco, a study I will tell you more about in a future newsletter.  We will soon post our 2010 tax returns for public scrutiny. Why can’t we attract the attention of a wealthy foundation or donor? Sometimes, I make myself sick worrying over the finances of the Council.

Please consider donating or joining as a member. If you cannot afford $50.00, then donate whatever you can afford. We now have the ability to process donations via credit cards – not just PayPal – so the $5.00/month option is even easier.

New Phase of My Life

As of July 1st, I will enter a new phase of my life.  I will stop publishing peer-reviewed scientific papers and concentrate on getting vitamin D into the brains of autistic children. This will involve everything from treating children at the free clinic, public speaking about vitamin D and autism, running public service announcements on TV and radio, supporting the autism and vitamin D study at UCSF, and trying to get Congressional hearings on vitamin D and autism.  For that reason, from now on, please videotape your autistic child before starting the vitamin D and again six months after obtaining a blood levels of 80-100 ng/ml.  I may ask you to testify in the future, hopefully in Washington DC; before and after videotapes would be powerful testimony.

However, the free clinic, even with my time entirely donated, costs money.  Please help us.

Become a member of the Vitamin D Council.

John Cannell, MD
Vitamin D Council
1241 Johnson Ave., #134
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401

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