by Biologist » Thu Oct 15, 2009 4:07 pm
Hi, errs,
I don't claim to be no expert on nothing* [see below], however it is my understanding that magnesium can be tricky to test. But if you are given a solution of it to drink, and none can be found in solution on the way out, it means that your system scarfed it up and needed it, so therefore you were low on it.
Your doctor may be trying to get you up to speed quickly on the Vitamin D (VD) such that your new levels will help during flu season. Best guess.
Your numbers were educational for me. First case study I have seen on the progression of VD levels with supplementation. Thanks. Here's a guy that knows his VD. He has written a peer reviewed paper on his theory of VD (boy, for some reason I just hate that abbreviation/"acronym"!) toxicity that appeared in one science or medical journal or another. I read the abstract one time. He hits on it a little in some of the text sited below.
*http://www.cholesterol-and-health.com/Vitamin-D.html
"Vitamin D Deficiency: Do Cholesterol-Lowering Statin Drugs Inhibit Vitamin D Synthesis?
Researchers know that vitamin D synthesis declines
with age -- and so does the concentration of
7-de-hydrocholesterol in the skin. Without 7-dehydro-
cholesterol in the skin, sunlight has nothing to turn
into vitamin D. The researchers consider it likely,
then, that the decreased synthesis of 7-dehydro-
cholesterol is responsible for the decreased synthesis
of vitamin D that comes with age.
It follows then, that the cholesterol-lowering drugs
known as statins, or HMG CoA reductase-inhibitors,
which inhibit the synthesis of 7-dehydrocholesterol,
also inhibit the synthesis of vitamin D.
As of May 25, 2006, there are no studies indexed for
Medline that tested the effect of statins on vitamin D
levels for longer than three months, and only one,
single study out of three that tested the effect of
statins on vitamin D levels for longer than one month
-- conducted a whopping fifteen years ago. The small
handful of short-term studies found no effect.
By contrast, researchers who showed that statins
induce dramatic deficiencies of coenzyme Q10 in
humans first retested coenzyme Q10 levels after six
months of administering the statin. They further found
that coenzyme Q10 levels kept decreasing over time
for over 18 months before settling.
We would expect statins to take even longer to cause
a drop in vitamin D levels, because, whereas coenzyme
Q10 is measured directly in the blood, the 7-dehydro-
cholesterol takes time to migrate to the surface of the
skin and accumulate there. So what is the effect of
statins on vitamin D levels one year down the road?
Two years? Five? Ten?
The truth is we have no idea, because no one has
bothered to study it.
Vitamin D Safety â€â€