Here's a link:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/quer ... s=16208113
Here's the specific info that tells us the when:
RESULTS: The distribution of month of onset of symptoms showed a statistically significant (chi test of homogeneity, P = 0.0008) temporal variability and seasonal incidence pattern with excess cases during summer and fall and a paucity of cases during colder months.
There are a few reasons running through my head as to why this might be happening.
What things change seasonally?
Temperature (hotter during summer and colder during winter)
Sunlight (more sun during summer and less during winter)
Colds/Flu (more colds/flu during fall/winter, flu shots)
Diet/Foods (seasonal foods - fruits, vegetables)
Being indoors/outdoors (indoors more during winter less during summer)
Being in closer proximity to more people (indoors and closer to people during the winter, more visitors during winter-holidays)
Traveling/vacation (tend to do more traveling and camping during summer)
Seasonal allergies (pollen, molds, mildews, etc)
Sleep (we probably get more sleep during winter and less during summer)
I can think of reasons why each of these things would play into the majority of cases being during the summer fall.
What might be some other related reasons that don't have a seasonal cause of the disease?
Perhaps during the summer our plans (which there might be more of than during the winter) were stopped many times due to illness and finally we decide to go see the dr and then we get diagnosed.
The thing that's looking to me to be the most obvious is Vitamin D levels. Why is that since Summer would be when we're getting the most? Because I would venture to guess that it takes a bit of time for the illness to manifest to the level that it does. Perhaps we didn't do as much traveling one summer or spent more time indoors or our vitamin D levels were depleted. So we go into fall, winter and spring, all the while our vitamin levels are going down, our immune system isn't being regulated as well, some bacteria/virus or drug or food, caused us to have a leaky gut. Our immune systems get triggered towards a TH1 response, it isn't being regulated well because of Vitamin D levels being low. So TH1 causes inflmation, that isn't being regulated, this inflamation brings more immune response, still no regulation, a vicious cycle and in the end we get what we have. How do we get out of this cycle? Well we need some form of regulation and we need to reduce inflamation. And this is exactly what glucocorticoids (the steroids some take) or some of the other drugs we take does to bring down inflamation and regulate the immune system. And now we know what else can do this, Vitamin D.
Even while writing this I can think of various causes of Vitamin D being low.
Not enough Vitamin D in our diets - cholecalciferol (D3), don't consume supplemented foods (milk), no fish in diet (salmon, tuna, mackerel, sardines, eel), no eggs, no fish oil, or wrong kind (ergocalciferol or D2 is not as effective as D3)
Not enough cholesterol in our bodies
Not enough sunlight - time spent outside, length of time, angle of sun, polution, sunscreen usage
Skin issues - dark skin, skin damage disease/cancer/burns, age - this is where 7-Dehydrocholesterol is converted to Cholecalciferol via UVB light
Liver damage/disease - this is where one form of Vitamin D (Cholecalciferol) is converted to the stored version of Vitamin D (calcidiol or 25-hydroxy-vitamin D).
Kidney damage/disease - this is where calcidiol is converted to the active form of vitamin D (calcitriol or 1,25 dihydroxy vitamin D3)
So here's the path to calcitriol (vitamin D3).
????? -> 7-Dehydrocholesterol (NOT SURE OF THE EXACT PATH HERE)
7-Dehydrocholesterol (in the skin) + UVB (sunlight) -> cholecalciferol
cholecalciferol (hydroxylated in the liver) -> calcidiol
calcidiol (in the kidney) -> calcitriol
Mike