Table of contents
- 80,000 Americans died of the flu in the winter of 2017
- Flu page in VitaminDWiki
- VitaminDWiki
- The Easiest Way to Prevent Colds and Flu
- Dr. Cannell - Vitamin D Council
- Zinc prevents colds and is also in every Vitamin D Receptor
- UVC air cleaner note by Admin of VitaminDWiki: Henry Lahore
- Type of infection vs time of the year
- Air filters in schools increased test scores - 2020
80,000 Americans died of the flu in the winter of 2017
Over 80,000 Americans Died of Flu Last Winter, Highest Toll in Years New York Times Oct 2018
Flu page in VitaminDWiki
Starts with
Vitamin D fights all phases of Influenza
- FACT: Vitamin D PREVENTS Influenza 7X lower risk
- FACT: Vitamin D SUPRESSES Influenza ( Vitamin D Hammer )
- Single dose of 50,000 IU of vitamin D stops Influenza symptoms
- FACT: Vitamin D PREVENTS & SUPRESSES Sepsis which is a rare but deadly consequence of Influenza
- FACT: Vitamin D enhances the activity of vaccines.
- FACT: improves Flu vaccine effectiveness and reduces side effects
- FACT: Vitamin D has virtually no side effects
- but 1 in 300 get people get muscle pain or itching due to lower magnesium levels
- FACT: Vitamin D prevents/suppresses over 120 health problems (left column)
- FACT: Both COVID-19 and Influenza are enveloped viruses
- FACT: Do not take vitamin D if Sarcoidosis, excess Calcium, Chemotherapy
- CONCLUSION To help protect/suppress influenza, take 50,000 IU of Vitamin D once a week
during the flu season if you are an average weight adult
VitaminDWiki
Influenza and infections
- Overview Influenza and vitamin D
- Influenza prevented by 40 ng levels or treated with vitamin D hammer (50,000 IU) – June 2015
- All items in category Immunity and Vitamin D
273 items)) - Additional 4 ng of vitamin D reduced chance of infection by 7 percent – June 2011
Example: increase from 10 ng to 60 ng ==> reduce infection by 88%- Influenza reduced by 1.7 with 1200 IU D3, also reduced related asthma by 6X – RCT May 2010
- Overview Middle East and vitamin D they get flu when they have the least amount of UV - IN THE SUMMER (they now avoid the summer sun)
- Influenza, seniors and vitamin D – Jan 2012
- Influenza risk reduced 2X by 2,000 IU of Vitamin D (vs 400), RTI reduced 3X by 400 or more IU – July 2017
- Number of people to treat to prevent 1 case of flu: Vitamin D 4, Vaccination 40 – Feb 2017
- If you have want to prevent influenza and have severely low vitamin D
- The # needed to prevent with Vitamin D is 4
- The # needed to prevent with flu shots is 40
- Respiratory tract infection eliminated in 36 percent of people by 4000 IU of Vitamin D – RCT Sept 2015
Colds etc
- Stopped my cold in 1 day (3 of the 9 techniques used fast-acting Vitamin D) July 2017
- Common cold prevented and treated by Vitamin D, Vitamin C, Zinc, and Echinacea – review April 2018
- Inexpensive Trick to Cure a Cold - vitamin D - Mercola Nov 2010
- Reduce probability of getting the Flu
- Colds not decreased if people already vitamin D sufficient – RCT Oct 2012
- Review of common cold (42 billion dollars) prevention and treatment - Zinc works – Feb 2014
- Common cold (Acute Rhinosinusitis) virually non-existant when Vitamin D is above 50 ng – Oct 2015
- 4.5X more likely to catch a cold if low sleep - hypothesis - due to low vitamin D
- Respiratory infections (RTI) cut in half by 20,000 IU weekly vitamin D if initially deficient – RCT March 2015
- Many additional ways to improve your immune system with Vitamins and Metals
- Reduction in Cold and Flu with Vitamin D which has the following
All of the studies in Breathing and Virus are listed here:
- Newly diagnosed Asthma increased 13% if COVID vaccination (200,000 US children) – Sept 2024
- France has injected 200,000 infants with RSV vaccine, based on no long-term data - Here we go again - Dec 2023
- Vitamin D energizes the innate and adaptive immune systems to fight lung inflammation – Sept 2022
- Calcifediol (semi-activated Vitamin D) might treat Respiratory Diseases such as COVID - July 2022
- Croup (due to viruses) has surged with Omicron - March 2022
- Compare symptoms of Omicron, Flu and Colds
- Small amounts of Vitamin D reduce Influenza risk by 22 percent (loading dose is far better) – meta-analysis Jan 2022
- Italians entering hospital for breathing problems had low vitamin D (with and without COVID), Vitamin D should help – Nov 2021
- Superspreaders appear to have viscous lung fluids or be obese
- COVID-19 lung death 4X more likely in Iran if less than 25 ng of vitamin D – Oct 30, 2020
- Acute viral respiratory infections (RTI) reduced by Vitamin D - 20 reviews - Aug 2020
- COVID ARDS deaths 2X more likely if less than 10 ng of Vitamin D – Aug 8, 2020
- Respiratory viral infection (RSV) and low vitamin D - many studies
- Zinc, respiratory tract infections and COVID-19 – July 2020
- Vitamin D reduces viral respiratory infections – editorial April 18, 2020
- Viral infection wheezing 24X more likely if less than 15 ng of Vitamin D – Dec 2019
- Ultraviolet light kills cold and flu viruses, and generates Vitamin D in the skin
- Respiratory Virus risk reduced 35 percent by Vitamin D (14,000 IU weekly) – RCT Oct 2018
- Common cold prevented and treated by Vitamin D, Vitamin C, Zinc, and Echinacea – review April 2018
- Half the risk of Influenza -A in infants taking 1200 IU of vitamin D for 4 months – RCT Jan 2018
- Loss of smell may be related to low Zinc or perhaps low vitamin D
- Severe Pertussis is 1.5 times more likely if poor vitamin D receptor – Feb 2016
- Immune response to respiratory viruses – vitamin D connection – review May 2015
- Overview Colds and flu and Vitamin D
- Influenza reduced by 1.7 with 1200 IU D3, also reduced related asthma by 6X – RCT May 2010
The Easiest Way to Prevent Colds and Flu
From http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bill-gottlieb/the-easiest-way-to-preven_b_651576.html
America has a nasty cold.Collectively, we cough, sniffle and sneeze our way through one billion colds a year, spending 1.5 billion dollars for doctor visits and 2 billion dollars on non-prescription cough and cold treatments. Fortunately, few people die of a cold. But you can't say that about the flu.
The influenza virus hospitalizes more than 200,000 Americans a year and kills 36,000, many of them over 65. (And flu shots are no guarantee. From 2007 to 2008, the shot was only 44 percent effective in stopping the flu.)
Is there any way to make yourself less vulnerable to these two infections?
Yes, says a study published on June 14, 2010 in the open-access online medical journal Plos One. Make absolutely certain you have higher-than-normal blood levels of vitamin D.
Here's what you need to know about the study and its practical application.
The study was led by James R. Sabetta, MD, in the Department of Medicine at Yale University School of Medicine and the Section of Infectious Diseases at Greenwich Hospital in Greenwich, Connecticut. He and his colleagues observed the obvious: rates of "acute respiratory tract infections" (colds and flu) rise in the fall and winter. But why? Could the seasonal drop in blood levels of vitamin D — a hormone-like nutrient produced most abundantly in the body when the skin is exposed to the strong, direct sunlight of summer — explain the phenomena?
To find out, the researchers took monthly measurements of the blood levels of vitamin D (25-hydroxyvitamin D) in 195 healthy adults. The measurements started the third week in September and continued for the next four to five months. At the same time, the study participants were asked to report any acute respiratory tract infections. The results were, well, decisive.
Those who had blood levels lower than 38 ng/ml (nanograms per milliliter) had twice as many upper respiratory tract infections.
Among the 18 people in the study who consistently maintained blood levels of vitamin D above 38 ng/ml, 15 were completely free of upper respiratory tract infections — no colds, no flu! (Of those 18 folks, 13 were taking vitamin D supplements. More about that in a minute.)
And when the above-38 group did succumb to cold or flu, their illnesses were shorter. The percentage of days ill with acute respiratory tract infections in the above-38 group was 4.9 times lower than in the below-38 group.
Of the other 180 participants — all of them with blood vitamin D levels consistently below 38 ng/ml — 81 developed colds and flu.
The study's statistical summary: the 38 plus group had a two-fold decrease in the risk of developing a cold or flu.
Chart from the PDF
Other Research
The Yale researchers aren't the first to link vitamin D levels and the flu. In research reported in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition in March, 2010, Japanese doctors studied 334 children, half of whom took 1200 IU of vitamin D daily. Eighteen of the children taking vitamin D developed the flu, compared to 31 children not taking the vitamin, a risk reduction of 58 percent. An earlier study in the Archives of Internal Medicine looked at 19,000 adults and adolescents and found that those with the lowest blood levels of vitamin D were 40 percent more likely to have had a recent cold or flu, compared to those with the highest levels. In another study, women taking 2,000 IU of vitamin D (to protect bones) had an average of nine episodes of colds and flu over three years of taking the supplement — compared to an average of 30 episodes in a group of women taking 200 IU of vitamin D.But the Yale study was the first to methodically track vitamin D levels and colds/flu incidence during the cold/flu season. What did the Yale researchers have to say about their startling results?
"Maintenance of a 25-hydroxyvitamin D serum concentration of 38 ng/ml or higher should significantly reduce the incidence of acute viral respiratory infections and the burden of illness caused thereby, at least during the fall and winter." Easier said than done.
Dr. Cannell - Vitamin D Council
A deficiency of vitamin D is incredibly common, says James Cannell, MD, president of the Vitamin D Council (www.vitaminDcouncil.com) and co-author of the paper "Epidemic Influenza and Vitamin D," published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Health. In fact, your risk of a deficiency of vitamin D is 50 percent — one out of every two Americans is likely to have blood levels below 20 ng/ml, he says.
In fact, Dr. Cannell is convinced that a low blood level of vitamin D is the reason people are vulnerable to cold and flu viruses. "Vitamin D dramatically increases the production of the body's own antimicrobial peptides," he told me, for the "Cold and Flu" chapter of my most recent book, Speed Healing (Bottom Line Books). "If you have sufficiently high blood levels of vitamin D, you'll have enough of those peptides to kill cold and flu viruses before they have a chance to penetrate the mucosal barrier."
Here are Dr. Cannell's recommendations for making sure your blood levels of vitamin D stay high throughout the year.
There's only one way to know for sure if your levels are high enough — get a blood test. But you don't have to go to a doctor to do it. The ZRT Laboratory (www.zrtlab.com) provides a reliable in-home vitamin D blood test, says Dr. Cannell. He recommends a test every six months.
Maintain blood levels of between fifty to eight ng/ml. While 38 ng/ml was generally protective in the Yale study, Dr. Cannell says research shows this higher level is necessary for vitamin D to be stored in muscles and fat and most effectively do its preventive work. And that's a lot of work. Studies over the past few years show vitamin D can prevent (and often treat) cancer, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis, obesity, depression, asthma, multiple sclerosis, ulcerative colitis, and many other conditions. In fact, high levels of Vitamin D have been linked to a reduction of death from any cause. (The nutrient has such a wide-ranging effect, says Dr. Cannell, because it targets more than 2,000 genes — 10 percent of the human genome.)
Take a vitamin D supplement. Dr. Cannell recommends 5,000 IU a day. (To get that amount from D-fortified milk, you'd need to drink 50 glasses a day, he points out.) "Anyone who takes this amount regularly shouldn't get a cold or flu," he told me. "If you do get one, it should be mild." He also recommends taking vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol), not vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol), its synthetic analog. "Vitamin D3 is the compound your skin makes naturally when you go in the sun, and it's more potent and safer than vitamin D2." And don't worry about an overdose, says Dr. Cannell. "There is not a single case in the medical literature of vitamin D toxicity while taking regular doses of 25,000 IU or less," he says. (The ideal vitamin D supplement includes co-factors like magnesium and zinc, says Dr. Cannell, and he has formulated his own brand, from Purity Products (www.purity.com): Dr. Cannell's Vitamin D.)
Spend some no-sunblock time in the sun during the summer months. He recommends near-daily exposure of most of the whole body (not just the face and hands) for 5 to 10 minutes, when the sun is highest in the sky (when your shadow is longer than you are). "You're not making much vitamin D when your shadow is shorter," he says.
VitaminDWiki Correction: when shadow is shorter
Zinc prevents colds and is also in every Vitamin D Receptor
- Zinc and Vitamin D category listing has
90 items along with related searches - Zinc Lozenges Reduce Duration of Common Cold Lee Swanson Research Dec 2013
- comment on Zinc for the common cold Cochraine Report of June 2013
- >75 mg of Zinc taken early and often reduces the duration of a cold.
- 50 mg Zinc Gluconate or Acetate several times a day Life Extension Mag 2014
- Take several times a day as Zinc has a short half-life in your body
UVC air cleaner note by Admin of VitaminDWiki: Henry Lahore
My 102 year-old father-in-law and I used UVC air cleaners to kill any bacteria in our rooms.
Got the UVC idea from hospitals. UVC seem to help a lot.
There are a variety of UVC air cleaners with HEPA filters on Amazon for less than $100.
They seem to stop the spread of cold bacteria
Update 2019
Have been using 3 UVC air cleaners for 3+ years to stop a cold within a few hours Amazon $35
Along with Zinc and Vitamin D
Type of infection vs time of the year
Rhinovirus Infection = Common Cold Medscape 2017
Coronavirus infections in hospitalized pediatric patients with acute respiratory tract disease - 2012 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-12-365
Air filters in schools increased test scores - 2020
What if we just made sure the air was clean in schools? Fast Company
Increase in test scores was equal to that of adding 1/15 of a teacher to each class
The annual cost of the air filter per classroom + public area $1300/year
The annual cost of the teacher (without benefits, retirement, etc?) $55,000/year
So the air filter was about 1/3 the cost to produce the same benefit
 Download the non-peer reviewed PDF from VitaminDWiki
Study does not indicate, but the founder of VitaminDWiki suspects the benefits are due to reduced respiratory infections, air polution- Decreased student and teacher absenteeism
- Increased productivity by students and teachers
There would have been an even bigger increase in test scores if they had included UVC air cleaners and/or UVB light
- UVB added in classroom reduced cavities, increased height, increased academics. etc study 10 years before
There have actually been56404 visitors to this page since it was originally made Overview Colds and flu and Vitamin D17726 visitors, last modified 09 Feb, 2022, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)Attached files
ID Name Uploaded Size Downloads 13527 HCoV season.jpg admin 23 Feb, 2020 17.54 Kb 4860 13308 Air filter higher test scores.pdf admin 10 Jan, 2020 1.35 Mb 1699 11073 Infection vs month.jpg admin 22 Dec, 2018 25.12 Kb 6429 132 Vitamin D reduces chance of viral infections.gif admin 07 Aug, 2010 15.27 Kb 18154 - Zinc Lozenges Reduce Duration of Common Cold Lee Swanson Research Dec 2013
- Additional 4 ng of vitamin D reduced chance of infection by 7 percent – June 2011