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Vitamin D Deficiency and Eye's

by Sheri
(Austrailia)


I have been told that I have low vitamin D and High ANA. Somewhere around 1250ANA. I have had itchy patches on my face around my nose, chin and brow. My eye's are puffy and itchy much like a sensitivity to pollen.

The skin over my eyelids are rapidly aging due to the inflammation, itching etc.

Could it be a result of vitamin D deficiency? Has anyone experienced this with their eyes and seen improvement after raising their vitamin D levels?













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Comments for
Vitamin D Deficiency and Eye's

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Not Vitamin D Deficiency...
by: Kerri Knox, RN- The Immune Queen!

Hi Sheri,

While I would love to be able to tell you that raising your vitamin d levels is going to solve your problem, it's not likely to. While getting your Vitamin D Levels up to the researcher recommended 'optimal' level is GREAT and it may HELP, it's not your primary problem.

Did your doctor discuss with you at all what a high ANA means? If not, it means that you have an autoimmune disease. And while its likely that your doctors are going to be running around in a flurry trying to find out WHICH autoimmune disease you have and to give it a name so that they can breathe a sigh of relief that they did their job- getting a diagnosis will be meaningless to you because it does not solve your problem in the least!!

What just MAY solve your problem, however, is to realize that the Underlying Cause of nearly

every single autoimmune disease is Gluten Sensitivity!!

That could also be the reason for the skin problems as there are SO MANY connections between gluten problems and skin disorders.

So, you have two choices now. You can read my pages on:

Gluten Sensitivity

and

Diagnosing Gluten Allergy


and give a Gluten Intolerance Diet a try and see what it can do for you. OR you can spend the next several months going through lab testing and Xrays and upper gi procedures, etc. Then get some name for your condition that you then get drugs for that don't actually solve your problem even though they are the 'indicated' drug for your condition.

Then after 6 months of this, you decide to research a better way and find out that most autoimmune disorders are Gluten Sensitivity problems and then try it. Either way, down the line, at some point this issue of gluten sensitivity is going to come up- regardless of the results of all of the testing.



Kerri Knox RN Immune Health Queen

Kerri Knox, RN- The Immune System Queen
Functional Medicine Practitioner
Easy Immune Health.com



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