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Vitamin C: Your Ultimate Health Insuranceby Hans R. Larsen, MSc ChE
When tallying the achievements of medical research in the latter part of the
20th century one discovery will stand out - the discovery that vitamin-C is
uniquely important to the health and wellbeing of humans.
Vitamin C was first isolated in 1928 by the Hungarian biochemist and Nobel
prize winner Dr. Szent-Gyorgyi. Vitamin-C plays an important role as a
component of enzymes involved in the synthesis of collagen and carnitine;
however, its most vital role is no doubt that of the primary, water-soluble
antioxidant in the human body(1,2,3).
Two-time Nobel prize winner, Dr. Linus Pauling was the first to realize
vitamin C's crucial importance in the maintenance of a healthy immune system.
In 1970 he proposed that regular intake of vitamin-C in amounts far higher
than the officially sanctioned RDA (Recommended Daily Allowance) could help
prevent and shorten the duration of the common cold. Although the medical
establishment immediately voiced their strong opposition to this idea, many
ordinary people believed Dr. Pauling and began taking large amounts of
vitamin-C. Most immediately noticed a great decrease in the frequency and
severity of their colds(4).
Recent medical research has confirmed Dr. Pauling's original idea. Not only
does a high vitamin C intake markedly reduce the severity of a cold, it also
effectively prevents secondary viral or bacterial complications. Vitamin C
works by stimulating the immune system and protecting against damage by the
free radicals released by the body in its fight against the infection(1,5,6).
Dr. Pauling recommended vitamin C intakes of 1000 mg/day or more. The
official RDA is 60 mg/day (100 mg/day for smokers). So who is right? How
much do we need? To answer this question it is crucial to realize that the
RDA is not, in anyway, based on what is required for optimum health. The RDA
is simply the amount required to avoid scurvy, the most obvious deficiency
disease. Actually the RDA is based on the vitamin C content of the average
diet. The logic goes somewhat like this: "The average "healthy" North
American diet provides about 60 mg/day of vitamin C, so since scurvy is
virtually unknown in the USA today 60 mg/day must be adequate." So much for
science!
Many experts are now realizing that the RDA of 60 mg/day is far too low to
provide for optimum health and protection against disease. A team of medical
researchers at the National Institutes of Health in the USA recently
completed a study designed to determine the vitamin C requirements of
healthy, young men. They found that a minimum intake of 1000 mg/day was
required to completely saturate the blood plasma with vitamin C. They also
found that vitamin C should be taken in divided doses throughout the day as
urinary excretion increases rapidly when individual doses exceed 500 mg. The
researchers conclude that the RDA should be raised to 200 mg/day. This
amount of vitamin C can be obtained from a diet containing five daily
servings of fresh fruit and vegetables; unfortunately, less than 15 per cent
of children and adults in the USA actually consume such a diet(3,7).
While 200 mg/day of vitamin C may be sufficient to maintain a reasonable
health status in healthy, young men, it is clear that such a relatively low
intake is far from adequate for older and sick people. It is also evident
that far greater amounts are required to provide optimum protection against
degenerative diseases such as cancer and heart disease.
It has long been accepted that a diet rich in vitamin C from fruits and
vegetables provides protection against cancer and heart disease(1,8-28).
However, very little evidence has been available as to whether that
supplementation with vitamin C can increase this protective effect. This,
however, is now changing. Researchers from the National Institute on Aging
report that elderly people who take vitamin C and E supplements have a 50 per
cent lower risk of dying prematurely from disease than do people who do not
supplement(29). A Californian study concluded that people who consume more
than 750 mg/day of vitamin C reduce their risk of dying prematurely by 60 per
cent(30). Italian researchers have concluded that older people, especially
the sick are exposed to a much higher level of oxidative stress than are
younger people and that their low blood levels of vitamin C reflect this(31).
Other researchers have found that people who suffer from asthma, arthritis,
cancer, diabetes, and heart disease have much lower levels of vitamin C in
their blood than do healthy people(8,32-34).
Large doses (1-2 g/day) of vitamin C have been found to reduce asthma
symptoms significantly. Recent studies have shown that vitamin C
concentrations in the blood from rheumatoid arthritis patients are extremely
low and that vitamin C may protect against further damage to inflamed
joints(32,33,35).
Numerous studies have shown that an adequate intake of vitamin C is effective
in lowering the risk of developing cancers of the breast, cervix, colon,
rectum, esophagus, larynx, lung, mouth, prostate, and stomach(7,11,12,14,16-
23,36).
Daily supplementation with 500 mg of vitamin C for 10 years or more has been
found to cut the risk of developing bladder cancer by 60 per cent(37). The
spread of breast cancer (metastasis) is now believed to be predominantly due
to free radical damage which can be controlled through intake of increased
amounts of vitamin C(38). Supplementation with 3 g/day of vitamin C has been
found to effectively prevent further polyp growth in colon cancer and a
vitamin C intake of more than 157 mg/day has been found to reduce the risk of
developing colon cancer by 50 per cent(19,39).
Drs. Pauling and Cameron pioneered the use of large doses of vitamin C (>10
g/day) in the treatment of cancer patients. From their experiments at the
Vale of Leven Hospital in Scotland they concluded that terminal cancer
patients who received large, daily doses of vitamin C along with their
regular treatment lived much longer than patients who did not receive vitamin
C; they also had less pain and in general, a much improved quality of
life(8).
Dr. Hoffer of Victoria, Canada later expanded on the Pauling/Cameron
treatment protocol by adding large amounts of vitamin E, niacin, other B
vitamins, beta-carotene, and some minerals. Those of Dr. Hoffer's cancer
patients who followed this regimen lived, on the average, about 16 times
longer than those who did not(8).
Dr. Pauling believed that vitamin C combats cancer by promoting collagen
synthesis and thereby preventing growing tumors from invading adjacent
tissue(8). Many researchers now believe that vitamin C prevents cancer by
deactivating free radicals before they can damage DNA and initiate tumor
growth while others believe that vitamin C may sometimes act as a prooxidant
helping the body's own free radical defense mechanism destroy tumors in their
early stages(11-14,16,40). Whatever the mechanism, it is now clear that
vitamin C is effective in preventing cancer, alleviating its symptoms, and in
some cases, halting its progress.
Although the fact that diabetics are vitamin C deficient has been clearly
established, large scale clinical trials are still needed to determine
whether supplementation with large doses of vitamin C is safe and beneficial.
Some smaller trials have found that supplementation with 2 g/day lowered
fasting glucose levels (a beneficial effect) and reduced capillary fragility
in diabetics. Megadoses of vitamin C may, however, be toxic in diabetics
with certain kidney disorders(10,34).
Vitamin C lowers blood pressure and cholesterol levels, helps thin the blood
and protect it against oxidation and works in close synergism with vitamin
E(9,25,41-45). Vitamin C also helps prevent atherosclerosis by strenghtening
the artery walls through its participation in the synthesis of collagen, and
by preventing the undesirable adhesion of white blood cells to damaged
arteries(9,46,47). An adequate intake of the vitamin is highly protective
against stroke and heart attack(28,48,49).
A recent study shows that people who supplement with more than 700 mg/day of
vitamin C have a 62 per cent lower risk of dying from heart disease than do
people with a daily intake of 60 mg/day or less(49). Supplementation with 2
g/day of vitamin C has been found to reduce adhesion of monocytes (white
blood cells) to the lining of blood vessels and thereby reduce the risk of
atherosclerosis(46,47,50). Vitamin C supplementation (2 g/day) also
effectively reverses the vasomotor dysfunction often found in patients with
atherosclerosis(51). Some very recent research carried out in Japan has
shown that restenosis (reclosing of opened arteries) after angioplasty can be
significantly reduced by supplementing with ascorbic acid (500 mg/day)(52).
Supplementing with vitamin C has been found to significantly lower the risk
of cataracts and glaucoma and some very recent work has shown that open angle
glaucoma can be reversed by supplementing with large doses of vitamin
C(53,54).
Vitamin C supplementation (1000 mg/day) has also been found to significantly
decrease the risk of developing pressure sores in surgical patients(55).
Vitamin C is truly a wonder nutrient and there is no doubt that many of the
serious degenerative diseases plaguing the civilized world today can be
prevented or even reversed through an adequate intake of this essential
vitamin. The current RDA of 60 mg/day is clearly far too low and the
proposed new RDA of 200 mg/day, while perhaps adequate for healthy, young
males, would seem to be quite inadequate for older people and certainly way
too low for sick people. As a matter of fact, a scientific advisory panel to
the U.S. Government sponsored Alliance for Aging Research recently
recommended that all healthy adults increase their vitamin C intake to 250-
1000 mg/day(24). A daily intake of 250-1000 mg of vitamin C may be adequate
for preventive purposes, but far larger quantities are required in halting or
reversing cancer and heart disease. Although there has been some concern
that people suffering from hemochromatosis (a tendency to iron overload) may
be sensitive to high dosages of vitamin C most researchers now agree that
vitamin C is entirely safe even in daily quantities of 10 g or more(3,56,57).
An adequate intake of vitamin C is surely the best and most cost effective
health insurance available today!
Vol 15 No. 8, August 1997, pp. 22-4 |
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