Is Melanoma a Vitamin D Deficiency Cancer? Posted: 10-09-07 09:33am
TO: All melanoma researchers, doctors, and
patients.
Some are touting practically every disease
under the sun--even the common cold--as
being a vitamin D deficiency. Such
one-pill wonders raise a red flag.
Those selling vitamin D as a cure-all for
humanity's ills have a lot of explaining
to do. First and foremost, they will need
to explain why those diseases do not
afflict a baby in the womb, who is just as
susceptible to periods of vitamin D
depletion as the mother. They will then
need to explain why none of the touted
cancers (such as prostate, breast, and
colon) outpaced melanoma growth during the
sun-avoidance decades. They will also
need to explain why breast cancer
primarily afflicts women, when men are
similarly susceptible to vitamin D
deficiency. They will need to explain why
an internal organ would get depleted
first, when there's nothing to be gained
from it like there is with the skin. Then
they will need to explain why one person
would get one disease, say multiple
sclerosis, but another person would get
another disease, say rheumatoid arthritis,
when vitamin D is depleted in both. They
will need to explain why the disease is
consistently more common in the north and
less in the south, since people in the
north and south alike are susceptible to
vitamin D deficiency year-round. And on
top of all that, they will need to explain
how on earth the greatest minds of
medicine, working painstakingly over the
20th century with the most advanced
technologies, could have completely missed
vitamin D deficiency causing so many major
human illnesses.
Meanwhile, the most promising vitamin D
deficiency disease--melanoma--remains
neglected.