Showing posts with label UV-B Sun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UV-B Sun. Show all posts

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Shortest Day - Longest Night of the Year



On this Winter Solstice in the northern hemisphere, I'm still thinking about sunlight and the lack thereof. The sunlamp came a few days ago, and it's felt good to sit with it, even though it's only for 3 minutes to start. I exposed my face for two days, and today I think I'll do my legs. Skin everywhere on our bodies can take in that sunlight to make the Vitamin D.

Suddenly, it seems that something on my mind is everywhere. Newsweek had an article about Vitamin D, the "Sunshine Vitamin," two weeks ago, but I just read it this week. Also, thinking about the comment made by Carol in Ohio about Vitamin D and osteoporosis - thanks, Carol! - I looked at my calcium supplement, and found that it actually includes Vitamin D as well as the calcium. And I heard an amazing story during the church coffee hour on Sunday from the aunt of a friend. Now retired, she participated in a study on osteoporosis a few years ago. She would go in for blood tests every two weeks, and during one two week span in the winter, she went to Florida. When she came back, her Vitamin D level had jumped so much that the techs asked her what she had been up to. So, there you have it. Vitamin D can be good for bones, good for cancer prevention, and good to slow the spread of cancers we already have. Of course, the ideal levels haven't been set, and like many things, there's probably potential to overdo it with supplements.

In any event, I'll continue to get a few UV-B rays each day with the new sunlamp, and hope that my body is making all of the Vitamin D it needs, and hopefullly, keeping the cancer cells at bay.

My last post, on sunlight, also generated some ideas about language for a medical disclaimer from Teresa - thanks, Teresa! - and I think I've pasted it into my sidebar, although it hasn't appeared yet. Although I do like "translating" material for others once I've understood it, I really don't want anyone to think I'm giving medical advice. Even if I had medical training, which I don't, it's so clear that everyone's experience with illness is unique, and that's why medical experts need years of training to be able to give us medical advice.

And, finally, all of this thinking about sunlight led me to really notice what the sunshine looks like these days in Massachusetts, so I took some photos two days ago, when the sun was actually shining. The angle of the sun was so oblique that it looked like the end of the day at 2:00 p.m. I've posted one photo that Patty took of me standing next to a New England stone wall, with a neighbor's small pond in the distance, and one of my water garden, with a fish or two visible along with the sharp reflection. I would have put the photos at the end, but this is my first photo attempt, and blogger chose the spot!

Happy Solstice to all! I celebrate that after today, the light will be returning, slowly at first, but returning.

Friday, December 15, 2006

Vitamin D, UV-B Sunlight and Gallbladder Cancer

While wandering about the internet, I discovered an article about sunshine, UV-B sunlight in particular, Vitamin D, and cancer. Not just gallbladder cancer, but a number of cancers, especially those of the gastro-intestinal tract. Having found the one article, I have found some other articles on this topic. I've thought of myself as pretty well informed on health issues generally, but I don't remember reading any of this in my pre-cancer days.

Entitled "Solar ultraviolet-B exposure and cancer incidence and mortality in the United States, 1993–2002," the full text of the article that got me thinking about this is available online for those who want more information. The gist of this research, which uses data of 3 million cancer diagnoses from 1998 to 2002, and 3 million cancer deaths from 1993 to 2002, is that some cancers are more prevalent in areas of the country where people are less likely to have exposure to UV-B sunshine, and thus less likely to have good levels of Vitamin D. And, most important to me, this is true for women (but not necessarily men) with gallbladder cancer. If you are reading this and affected by another cancer, it's worth reading the long list of cancers in the study that the authors describe as impacted by lack of Vitamin D.

Let me try to say this more clearly (because goodness knows, the article has lots of technical medical language in it). Because parts of the U.S. are far enough north that even if we are outside during the winter months, we do not get enough UV-B sunlight to make the Vitamin D we need to have sufficient amount in our bodies. In another article this week, I read that the minimum daily requirement for Vitamin D was established by the government as a minimum to prevent rickets (early 1900s), and certainly it did not anticipate that many of us would spend our days indoors as well as be living too far north to benefit from the sunshine.

You may be wondering how all of this fits into the dermatologists' campaign over the last years to see that all of us wear our sunscreen outside. I'm not a doctor (as most of you reading this know), but I have heard even dermatologists say publicly recently that we should all be getting about 20 minutes of sunlight on our unprotected skin each day to ensure adequate amounts of Vitamin D in our bodies. So, I think that even with their worry about melanoma, they are recognizing that getting some sunlight is valuable. But after that 20 minutes, they want us to put the sunscreen on and restrict our exposure to the intense mid-day sun.

So, back to this study. Another aspect to this study is that while we can take Vitamin D supplements, there is actually some evidence that getting the sunshine, UV-B rays particularly, and making our own Vitamin D, is actually preferable to the supplements.

It seems that gallbladder cancer in women is statistically linked to insufficient sunlight exposure. As a result, I have purchased a "sun lamp" with UV-B rays, and when it arrives next week, I'm ready to use it the prescribed 20 minutes each day. Maybe it will slow the progression of the disease (which the article suggests sufficient UV-B exposure, and Vitamin D might), and maybe it won't. But I'll at least have a better mood through the dark winter days of Massachusetts, and maybe I'll even look a little tanned, instead of pasty! And, thinking back to the summer months immediately following my diagnosis, I am remembering how much time I spent outside, in the sun, wearing sunscreen, but not being obsessive about it, since I was no longer worried about skin cancer as much as I was about surviving gallbladder cancer for as long as possible. So, maybe the summer sunlight slowed the progression of the disease, and maybe my sunlamp will help now, too.

With this posting, I am thinking it's time to put a "This is not medical advice" warning on my blog. First, I have to figure out how! Thanks for reading.