Don't believe the lies. Here is the truth:
Edited by Johann, 27 September 2009 - 07:19 PM.
Posted 27 September 2009 - 07:18 PM
Edited by Johann, 27 September 2009 - 07:19 PM.
Posted 27 September 2009 - 07:21 PM
Posted 27 September 2009 - 07:47 PM
Posted 27 September 2009 - 07:51 PM
Posted 27 September 2009 - 08:01 PM
Posted 27 September 2009 - 08:28 PM
Posted 27 September 2009 - 08:37 PM
Posted 27 September 2009 - 08:40 PM
Now this I agree with.Careful what you read, hear, or see around here folks. It just might kill you.
Posted 27 September 2009 - 09:23 PM
Cigarettes are good for you.
Posted 27 September 2009 - 09:40 PM
Posted 27 September 2009 - 11:17 PM
Didn't watch the video, but I'm surprised at the responses. Isn't it pretty much known that vitamin D prevents skin cancer? Sunscreen use has gone up but melanoma rates have also gone up.
Edited by nancyd, 27 September 2009 - 11:21 PM.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 12:31 AM
Ultraviolet A and melanoma: a review.
Wang SQ, Setlow R, Berwick M, Polsky D, Marghoob AA, Kopf AW, Bart RS. Ronald O. Perelman Department of Dermatology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY 10016, USA.
The incidence and mortality rates of melanoma have risen for many decades in the United States. Increased exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation is generally considered to be responsible. Sunburns, a measure of excess sun exposure, have been identified as a risk factor for the development of melanoma. Because sunburns are primarily due to UVB (280-320 nm) radiation, UVB has been implicated as a potential contributing factor to the pathogenesis of melanoma. The adverse role of UVA (320-400 nm) in this regard is less well studied, and currently there is a great deal of controversy regarding the relationship between UVA exposure and the development of melanoma. This article reviews evidence in the English-language literature that surrounds the controversy concerning a possible role for UVA in the origin of melanoma. Our search found that UVA causes DNA damage via photosensitized reactions that result in the production of oxygen radical species. UVA can induce mutations in various cultured cell lines. Furthermore, in two animal models, the hybrid Xiphophorus fish and the opossum (Mondelphis domestica), melanomas and melanoma precursors can be induced with UVA. UVA radiation has been reported to produce immunosuppression in laboratory animals and in humans. Some epidemiologic studies have reported an increase in melanomas in users of sunbeds and sunscreens and in patients exposed to psoralen and UVA (PUVA) therapy. There is basic scientific evidence of the harmful effects of UVA on DNA, cells and animals. Collectively, these data suggest a potential role for UVA in the pathogenesis of melanoma. To date evidence from epidemiologic studies and clinical observations are inconclusive but seem to be consistent with this hypothesis. Additional research on the possible role of UVA in the pathogenesis of melanoma is required.
PMID: 11312434 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE
Posted 28 September 2009 - 12:51 AM
Posted 28 September 2009 - 09:07 AM
I'll grant that sunlight (if sufficiently intense) will make vitamin D, and vitamin D will protect against a variety of cancers. Sunlight will also upregulate melanin production in some people, leading to some degree of protection from the damaging effects of UVB. (Presumably making it harder to generate vitamin D, requiring more time in the sun, thus more damage to the skin.) However, if you are a light-skinned individual of Northern European descent, you may never make enough melanin to protect yourself sufficiently for significant sun exposure. The protective effect of vitamin D is not sufficient to compensate entirely for the mutagenicity of sunlight. If it were, there wouldn't be an epidemic of skin cancers in the Southern US, Australia, etc. The idea that sunlight PREVENTS skin cancer, or that it PREVENTS wrinkles is simply idiotic. I have a friend who died of melanoma. He had a pretty good tan as a result of a fair amount of sun exposure. He was also wrinkled, in a ruggedly handsome sort of way. He made a good looking corpse. Another friend used to like to hang out by the pool, you know, avoiding skin cancer. They caught his melanoma in time, and he survived. His dad, who also hung by the pool, didn't make it. His melanoma was too far advanced. So... I think there are some flaws in the "sunlight prevents skin cancer" concept.
This may come as a shock to some, but YouTube is not a reliable source for anything, much less medical information.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 09:47 AM
Cigarettes are good for you.
According to Youtube, well YES, they are.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 12:15 PM
Posted 28 September 2009 - 02:27 PM
Edited by Jay, 28 September 2009 - 03:18 PM.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 04:55 PM
Radiation hormesis at this stage is still a pretty weak, if not worthless, hypothesis. If you have evidence clearly disproving the linear dose no threshold model, it'd be worth discussing.What he says in the video sounds very reasonable. He mentioned adequate protection and didn't advocate overdoing it. Everyone here has heard of hormesis. Sure you can't deny the benefits of something nearly all life on earth evolved with.
So modest today, aren't you?I'm not conceding anything because I'm right.
Arrogance - brilliance, is there really a difference?As far as getting skin cancer, things like a lack of B vitamins, took much PUFA intake, lack of antioxidants etc play into that. I got so much catalase, SOD, glutathione running around inside me that I am immune to skin cancer. I eat brazil nuts, drink the heck out of green and black tea, takes tons of b vitamins, take grape seed extract and resveratrol.
Edited by kismet, 28 September 2009 - 04:56 PM.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 05:58 PM
Edited by Jay, 28 September 2009 - 06:10 PM.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 07:08 PM
Well, even assuming that he did not pull a Hwang Woo-suk, the high cancer rate could affect generalisability (or reflect methodological shortcomings). Then there's the recent influx of epidemiological trials finding no connection between Vitamin D and various cancers. I haven't read most of 'em yet, but IIRC there was at least one prospective cohort of about 50k participiants(?) and one nested case-control study which found no connection with breast cancer (and this cancer was pretty well documented to be likely or possibly vitamin D dependent). OTOH there were two studies showing decreased mortality, therefore I consider the prevention hypothesis still in doubt.Am I missing anything that you are aware of?
Posted 28 September 2009 - 07:35 PM
Posted 28 September 2009 - 07:40 PM
I'm surprised you don't understand the flame, given the hubristic way in which the claim that sunlight PREVENTS skin cancer and wrinkles was presented. That is a blanket statement, in all caps no less. Life on earth evolved with sunlight, but we were geographically isolated so that our level of melanin matched our UV exposure. Then we started moving around. Now we have pale-skinned people living in tropical latitudes, and they are at risk from UV. We have dark-skinned people living in northern latitudes, and they are at risk of vitamin D deficiency.Don't understand the flame here. What he says in the video sounds very reasonable. He mentioned adequate protection and didn't advocate overdoing it. Everyone here has heard of hormesis. Sure you can't deny the benefits of something nearly all life on earth evolved with.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 08:16 PM
I'm surprised you don't understand the flame, given the hubristic way in which the claim that sunlight PREVENTS skin cancer and wrinkles was presented. That is a blanket statement, in all caps no less. Life on earth evolved with sunlight, but we were geographically isolated so that our level of melanin matched our UV exposure. Then we started moving around. Now we have pale-skinned people living in tropical latitudes, and they are at risk from UV. We have dark-skinned people living in northern latitudes, and they are at risk of vitamin D deficiency.
Edited by Jay, 28 September 2009 - 08:16 PM.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 09:11 PM
Edited by kismet, 28 September 2009 - 09:12 PM.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 09:24 PM
In this particular context, where sunlight is claimed to "PREVENT" skin cancer, it's not so much of a red herring, since it's the only reason that sunlight is "good" for skin, other than inducing melanin production I suppose. Or are there more majikal mechanisms that I'm missing?The vitamin D issue is great in its own right, but nonetheless a red herring. It is not in any way related to the carcinogenity of UV radiation.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 10:04 PM
You might be right about moderate sun exposure being a net benefit (compared to no vitamin D at least), but your approach sounds more religious than scientific. By the way, are you also immune to the radium in Brazil nuts? And, mega-doses of selenium?
Posted 28 September 2009 - 10:56 PM
I don't take mega-doses of selenium. I eat one to two brazil nuts a day. But you indirectly prove a point. A little bit of brazil nut is good and healthy while a pound a day would be harmful not just because of the radium but because of the high selenium as well. But brazil nuts are better than supplement pill form. The pills would cause my blood sugar to crash.
Okay I'm off to class. Taking microbiology. That's Microbiology. Its something smart people study.
Edited by VespeneGas, 28 September 2009 - 11:05 PM.
Posted 28 September 2009 - 10:59 PM
In this particular context, where sunlight is claimed to "PREVENT" skin cancer, it's not so much of a red herring, since it's the only reason that sunlight is "good" for skin, other than inducing melanin production I suppose. Or are there more majikal mechanisms that I'm missing?
Posted 29 September 2009 - 11:22 AM
In this particular context, where sunlight is claimed to "PREVENT" skin cancer, it's not so much of a red herring, since it's the only reason that sunlight is "good" for skin, other than inducing melanin production I suppose. Or are there more majikal mechanisms that I'm missing?
Sunlight is good for our skin because it's all natural and we've been exposed to it for millions of years.
You know, like it's good for our health to die of infectious disease before we're 40. Don't you realize, Johann has been exposed to UV radiation for years, and doesn't have malignant melanoma? Case closed.
Posted 29 September 2009 - 11:27 AM
That is my point, the very reason why it is a red herring. Vitamin D prevents (actually may prevent) (skin) cancer. Not UV radiation or teh sun, but Vitamin D. Furthermore, the fact that there may be a net benefit distracts (and is deliberately used to distract) from the fact that taking vitamin D and avoiding the sun the benefit would be bigger & the mechanism of carcinogenesis remains unchanged (!) whether the hypothesis is true or not - that's IMHO a picture book example of this rhetorical trick. The delta remains the same. If UVRs are carciniogenic (which the evidence strongly supports) & all variables being equal (=good experimental design), a person exposed to this carcinogen will develop more cancer.In this particular context, where sunlight is claimed to "PREVENT" skin cancer, it's not so much of a red herring, since it's the only reason that sunlight is "good" for skin, other than inducing melanin production I suppose. Or are there more majikal mechanisms that I'm missing?The vitamin D issue is great in its own right, but nonetheless a red herring. It is not in any way related to the carcinogenity of UV radiation.
Edited by kismet, 29 September 2009 - 11:34 AM.
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