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Toggle Health Problems and D

Diseases correlated to month of birth – 2008

Human Responses to the Geophysical Daily, Annual and Lunar Cycles

see wikipage: http://www.vitad.org/tiki-index.php?page_id=1715

Gray line shows how low Vitamin D level is in the Spring

part 1 of table from Vitamin D, light and mental healthMats B. Humble  Aug 2010

part 2 of table from Vitamin D, light and mental healthMats B. Humble  Aug 2010

CLICK HERE for details of graphs above

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The following is the portion of the 2008 text concerning MS and vitamin D

The incidence of multiple sclerosis (MS) varies with latitude. Ebers has co-ordinated a study 46 that examined more than 40,000 Canadian, British, Danish and Swedish patients with multiple sclerosis. The results show that in the Northern hemisphere, significantly fewer (8.5%) people with MS were born in November and significantly more (9.1%) were born in May. In the Southern hemisphere, the situation is reversed and November is the peak month and May the lowest. There are several clues as to the cause. An important study 47 compared the risk of two or more siblings having multiple sclerosis to the risk of its occurrence in both twins in a non-identical pair. There should be no difference, but non-identical twins do have a significantly higher risk of both having MS than non-twin siblings. This suggests that the pre-natal and post-natal environment affects the overall risk. Pinpointing the actual environmental factor has been problematic.

Correlations have been made between the incidence of MS, the availability of dietary vitamin D, and the availability of sunlight to drive vitamin D3 synthesis. In Japanese populations, who consume plenty of fish rich in vitamin D (90% of the Japanese vitamin D requirement comes from fish, 3% from eggs and 3% from milk), the MS prevalence is three per 100,000 population. MS has a very low frequency in equatorial regions where, it is argued, there is plenty of sunlight to drive vitamin D3 synthesis in the skin, whilst the incidence of MS increases dramatically with latitude in both hemispheres. In Scotland (in the north) and Tasmania (in the south), the prevalence is 250 per 100,000 population. Such arguments have also been used to explain two peculiar geographic anomalies on MS frequency, one in Switzerland with high MS rates at low altitudes and low MS rates at high altitudes, and one in Norway with a high MS prevalence inland and a lower MS prevalence along the coast. Ultraviolet light intensity is higher at high altitudes, resulting in a greater vitamin D3 synthetic rate, thereby accounting for low MS rates at higher altitudes. On the Norwegian coast, fish is consumed at high rates and fish oils are rich in vitamin D3 48.

Full article is attached at the bottom of this page


See also Vitamin D Life

chart from PDF and wiki with same name

Thanks to Rufus Greenbaum for finding articles on this in The Times (UK) and UK Daily Mail June 2011

and finding the original medical article which they referred to (attached below)

Daily Mail article on Birth Month - June 2011 sample table follows

Image

See also web

Attached files

ID Name Comment Uploaded Size Downloads
567 Birth Month Psy.PNG admin 10 Jun, 2011 18:50 136.68 Kb 11694
559 20080909 Vitamin D Seasonality of illnesses.pdf admin 09 Jun, 2011 21:56 453.15 Kb 1582
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