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The Mayo Clinic study is the latest of many to show a correlation between low D vitamin levels and chronic pain. Others include a 2007 study by the Dubai Bone and Joint Center, which screened patients diagnosed with fibromyalgia and/or non-specific musculoskeletal pain for deficiency. 74% of the patients showed deficiency, but treatment with supplements resulted in clinical improvement in 90% of patients.<br><br>https://supplementsbureau.com/turmeric-plus-review/<br><br>https://supplementsbureau.com/balanced-keto-weekly-meal-plans-review/<br><br>https://diethours.com/ocanna-cbd-oil-review/<br><br>https://dietsheriff.com/cla-2000-review/
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Are You Eating Biodynamic Food? A small but intriguiging study by Johns Hopkins followed five patients with confirmed low levels of the vitamin, all of whom experienced unusual pain that could not be attributed to any other source. The pain, which did not respond to analgesics or opiates, was resolved 5 to 7 days after supplementation. In one case, months after treatment and subsequent improvement, the patient's blood levels of the vitamin again declined and the pain recurred. The pain again resolved with supplements. Vitamin D, which is known as the sunshine vitamin because exposure to sunlight triggers the body to produce it, is known to play a significant role in promoting bone and muscle strength. Low levels it are associated with bone fractures, muscle weakness, and bone cell death. Dr. Michael Turner, head of the Mayo Clinic study, called deficiency of this vitamin "an under-recognized source of diffuse pain and impaired neuromuscular function" and said that recognizing the importance of adequate levels could substantially improve the quality of life for chronic pain patients. People at most risk for deficiency include the elderly, those with limited sun exposure, pregnant women, and people with various types of bowel or kidney disease. However studies of American school children also show a troubling trend to deficient levels. Increasing incidence of a number of disorders, including a reappearance of the bone-softening disease rickets, have been associated with deficiencies. "Ice cream, ice cream, we all scream for ice cream". Then we look in the mirror and scream again when we see that the ice cream has taken up permanent residence on our belly, hips, and thighs. Are you a fan of the cool concoction but tired of paying the price for indulging in the dairy delight? Or are you lactose intolerant and a simple scoop of your favorite flavor will cause you to scream with anything but delight? For whatever reasons you regret craving the cold, creamy stuff, don't despair. There is a solution to your predicament. Meet the popular dessert's culinary cousin: fruit sorbet. Homemade fresh fruit sorbets are the healthy equivalent of their evil relative. They don't contain dairy products, unpronounceable chemicals, high-fructose corn syrup, refined and processed sugar, animal fat, or high amounts of calories and guilt. They do contain fresh fruit and nothing else. Oh, yes there is one other ingredient: the ability to kick cravings for that other substance right out of your head. https://supplementsbureau.com/turmeric-plus-review/ https://supplementsbureau.com/balanced-keto-weekly-meal-plans-review/ https://diethours.com/ocanna-cbd-oil-review/ https://dietsheriff.com/cla-2000-review/