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What happens when a human stay in pitch darkness for a few months straight without having any sun/light exposure?

Ex:

Staying in a room with no openings where light can come through for 3 or 4 months.

I want no I don't knows....if you know it answer please.

2006-09-08 13:18:50 · 8 answers · asked by HayabusaXGrey 2 in Health Other - Health

8 answers

Two recent scientific studies published or announced have linked a lack of exposure to Vitamin D, which is created naturally by sunshine or artificial ultraviolet light as a significantly increased risk factor for developing multiple sclerosis.

A Harvard study published in the January 13 issue of the respected medical journal, Neurology - the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology - has identified a lack of Vitamin D as a principle indicator in incidence of the deadly, debilitating disease, multiple sclerosis in women. The study's author, Kassandra Munger, MSc, of Harvard School of Public Health in Boston - noted that the body makes vitamin D through exposure to sunlight's UV-B ultraviolet rays.

In addition, sunshine may protect against the development of multiple sclerosis, according to the findings of an Oxford University study to be published in next month's Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

According to that study, the exact causes of MS remain unknown, but the disease becomes more prevalent the further away people live from the equator. Records spanning over 30 years - from 1963 up to 1999 - of people with MS and other autoimmune or neurological diseases were included in the study. Scientists at the Unit of Health-Care Epidemiology, Department of Public Health at Oxford conducted this research.

According to the authors of that study, a minimum level of UV exposure throughout the year might therefore be important in conferring protection. They feel this exposure has the potential to better protect individuals against the development of MS by beneficially influencing the immune system response, possibly through changes to the production of vitamin D and melanin, the substance involved in acquiring a tan.

A major problem with generating sufficient Vitamin D, according to UV-energy researcher and widely published author Michael Stepp, is that so many humans live in high latitudes where, for climatic and other reasons, they are not exposed to sufficient natural sunlight. "From his position as professor of Medicine at the Boston University School of Medicine, Dr. Michael Holick's research has demonstrated that, for children suffering from Vitamin D deficiency, the incidence is 27% lower in Phoenix than in Boston," Stepp said. "Much other research, including these two new studies, show a correlation between high latitudes and increases in diseases linked to Vitamin D deficiency."

"Because the number of cases of MS increases the farther you get from the equator, one hypothesis has been that sunlight exposure and high levels of vitamin D may reduce the risk of MS,"said Harvard study author Kassandra Munger, MSc, of Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, MA.

Over the long run, the data in Munger's 10-years National Institute of Health-funded study of more than 185,000 women, showed that the women who maintained the recommended level of vitamin D in their system were 40 per cent less likely to develop than those women who were otherwise Vitamin D deficient. There are an estimated 250,000 to 350,000 Americans with MS.

"Vitamin D is produced naturally by the body when exposed to UV-B sunlight," Stepp explained, "and appropriate exposure to either natural and artificial sources of this ultraviolet light such as tanning beds can produce the same levels of Vitamin D in the human body."

"This research," Stepp notes, "adds to the growing body of knowledge that points to the benefits of moderate and responsible exposure to naturally- or artificially-produced UV-B sunlight, and of the risks that come from insufficient exposure to this critical element of sunlight. Other studies in 2002 and 2003 have linked insufficient UV-B exposure to a host of other serious health problems, from rickets to diabetes - and have demonstrated that UV-B is not a factor in cancerous melanoma, as was previously believed."

2006-09-08 13:21:55 · answer #1 · answered by cryingrainbow 2 · 0 1

I agree with most of what your saying but no user should play god in any section and I will admit I have taken out some users myself but they were all trolls and not everyone can handle the trashtalk like we can from trolls and I have lost some good friends from it and that's why I tell EVERYBODY to stay strong but some can't and we can't make them.I have been on Y/A for years myself and I have lost accounts also.I agree with the rest of what your saying and im one of the oldest users in this section and I grew up along time ago but I hate watching other users get bullied.

2016-03-27 03:26:42 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's going to take a little time to get your eyes reconditioned to light, get a good vitamin D supplement.

2006-09-08 13:49:28 · answer #3 · answered by sluggo1947 4 · 0 0

Your eyes will get real light sensitive, and your eyes will have to gradually get use to light again, before you can see well.

2006-09-08 13:22:43 · answer #4 · answered by WC 7 · 0 0

You start turning pale and can start seeing in the dark..

2006-09-08 13:24:12 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

THEY WOULD HAVE TO ADJUST GRADUALLY TO LIGHT ...IN INCREMENTS......IT WOULD CAUSE A SEVERE LACK OF VITAMIN D..NEEDED FOR HEALING....THEY WOULD BE VERY DISORIENTED AND DEPRESSED

2006-09-08 13:24:10 · answer #6 · answered by flowerspirit2000 6 · 0 0

You become like Cheney. :)

2006-09-08 13:25:35 · answer #7 · answered by worldneverchanges 7 · 1 0

you become dark.

2006-09-08 13:26:37 · answer #8 · answered by beckyboo 1 · 0 0

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