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    Even enormous doses of vitamin D, applied topically, do not produce toxicity

    Literature Review
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    • Z
      zorba990 @NotShanalotte
      last edited by

      @NotShanalotte Yes thanks! I see the term Viosterol used which is not clear to me on D2 v D3. However based purely on the age of the study I would guess D2.

      "As an inunction we made a compound of : yellow wax, 5 parts ; spermaceti, 5 parts ; viosterol in oil 250 D, 26 parts ; 5 olive oil, 10 parts, and lecithin, 0.75 parts, in a cold cream base. This mixture contained 1,800 rat units 6 of vitamin D per gram. Another compound using an irradiated mineral oil instead of viosterol was employed to determined the mechanism of the action of vitamin D by inunction. This preparation of an irradiated mineral oil is known to be a source of secondary radiation in that it is capable of fogging a photographic plate."

      NotShanalotteN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • DavidPSD
        DavidPS
        last edited by DavidPS

        @zorba990 said in Even enormous doses of vitamin D, applied topically, do not produce toxicity:

        Viosterol

        Ergosterol activated by ultraviolet irradiation; vitamin D2.
        A fat-soluble vitamin that prevents rickets.
        https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Viosterol&ia=web

        You can catch more flies with honey than vinegar. šŸ‘€
        ā˜‚ļø

        Z 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Z
          zorba990 @DavidPS
          last edited by

          @DavidPS thanks
          So until we have more information only D2 would be safe in such high dose topical formulations as its conversion to D3 can have a limitation

          Z 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Z
            zorba990 @zorba990
            last edited by

            @zorba990 bulk powder source
            https://www.amazon.com/Ergocalciferol-Vitamin-D-2-Powder-Vegetarian/dp/B01IUA2SCE

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            • NotShanalotteN
              NotShanalotte @zorba990
              last edited by

              @zorba990 You're welcome! If you ever need to get a full study, sci-hub lets you put in a link and if there's a legal copy it'll fetch it for you.

              Right now the country code is st, (sci-hub.st) but that has changed in the past and a quick search will usually find the working version.

              @DavidPS thanks for posting that info!

              "Bear...Seek...Seek...Lest."

              Z 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • B
                basebolt
                last edited by

                https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/01/140127164559.htm

                Has anyone seen this, which shows D2 supplementation in athletes resulted in poor outcomes, including lowering serum d3?

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                • Z
                  zorba990 @NotShanalotte
                  last edited by

                  @NotShanalotte
                  Interesting. Though muscle damage is the goal to most progressive weightlifting routines as this signals adaptation and strength/size increases. The key is not training until sufficiently recovered -- so if this allows milder training to inflict more damage it might be a net positive.

                  NotShanalotteN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • NotShanalotteN
                    NotShanalotte @zorba990
                    last edited by

                    @zorba990 I was kinda thinking that. A long time ago when I did weightlifting for power (as opposed to physique or reps) I did very few reps at 70-90% capacity. Was far more efficient than the routines the weights coach had me doing. So maybe use the short half-life of D2 to coincide with a lifting session and get away with closer to the 70% and see how that ends up. I dunno, just throwing an idea out there.

                    "Bear...Seek...Seek...Lest."

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                    • B
                      basebolt @NotShanalotte
                      last edited by

                      It found a significant and prolonged increase in creatine phosphokinase after exercise. A significantly greater serum myoglobin during exercise. No difference in DOMS. This could potentially increase the stressfulness of exercise to the body, but potentially one could exercise more lightly and less frequency and get the same benefits. Along the lines of what you're saying.

                      Screenshot_20240608-220051.jpg

                      NotShanalotteN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • NotShanalotteN
                        NotShanalotte @basebolt
                        last edited by

                        @basebolt For sure, that's the chart I was looking at.

                        "Bear...Seek...Seek...Lest."

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