Houston Chronicle

Vitamin D deficiency can have adverse effects on health.

- JOE AND TERESA GRAEDON Contact the Graedons at peoplespha­rmacy.com.

Q: During a very cold winter, I began to feel more sad than usual, as well as fuzzy, forgetful and achy. This worried me enough to send me to the doctor.

All my blood tests were fine except for my vitamin D, which was very low. Some high-dose supplement­s eventually caught me up, but apparently my ordinary multivitam­in hadn’t been working.

Now I am reading that low vitamin D has been linked to breast cancer, immune problems and other conditions, as well as seasonal affective

disorder. If I couldn’t get enough sun exposure to make vitamin D where I live, below the Mason-Dixon Line, what about people in the North? Can older people who don’t go outside get enough vitamin D?

A: Research links low circulatin­g levels of vitamin D to seasonal affective disorder (SAD) and depression (Psychiatry Research, May 30, 2015; PLoS One, Sept. 23, 2015).

Vitamin D deficiency also has been associated with conditions such as cancer, high blood pressure, arthritis, osteoporos­is, diabetes and multiple sclerosis (Nutrition Journal, Dec. 8, 2010).

You are correct that people in Northern states may have difficulty getting enough vitamin D. In fact, the National Health and Nutrition Examinatio­n Survey showed that 29 percent of Americans were deficient in vitamin D and another 41 percent had low levels (British Journal of Nutrition, April 28, 2018).

You can learn more about optimal vitamin D levels and supplement­s in our “Guide to Vitamin D Deficiency.” Anyone who would like a copy, please send $3 in check or money order with a long (No. 10), stamped (71 cents), self-addressed envelope to: Graedons’ People’s Pharmacy, No. D-23, P.O. Box 52027, Durham, NC 27717-2027. It also can be downloaded for $2 from our website: peoplespha­rmacy .com.

Q: Some years ago, I saw a hand surgeon for a painful thumb. She injected it with cortisone and then it locked up, so she wanted to operate.

Then I read in your column that Boniva can cause intractabl­e joint pain. Low and behold, I was taking Boniva!

I stopped the drug, and soon the pain stopped, too. No more meds for osteopenia. I am embarrasse­d to tell you that I am a pharmacist, still working after 59 years.

A: Thank you for sharing your experience. Others also have reported joint, muscle and back pain while taking ibandronat­e (Boniva).

Q: I am an asthmatic. When I was a child and young adult, terpin hydrate was the only cough medicine that could calm my coughing spells. Terpin hydrate saved my life more than once!

Over-the-counter cough meds simply do not work for me. I now have a severe cough, and several brands of cough relief meds have been completely ineffectiv­e.

I’ve been looking for terpin hydrate, but my pharmacy

does not carry it. Could you please advise?

A: Terpin hydrate was a popular cough medicine from the 1880s till the 1990s. This expectoran­t was created from ingredient­s in thyme, oregano and eucalyptus. It also was manufactur­ed from the resin of pine trees (oil of turpentine).

In the 1990s, the Food and Drug Administra­tion determined that there was not enough evidence of effectiven­ess, and the compound was effectivel­y banned. Many other readers have asked how to locate this old-fashioned remedy.

You can still obtain terpin hydrate from a compoundin­g pharmacy. To locate one in your area, search IACPRX.org. You will need a prescripti­on from your physician, however.

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