Possibly the most important role of vitamin C is as an antioxidant, protecting the watery
substances of the body, such as blood, from free radical damage. Vitamin C might reduce tissue damage associated with premature aging, cancer,
heart disease and arthritis.
Vitamin C may also prevent high blood pressure by
strengthening arterial walls and helping to counter stress. Vitamin C may also slow the
formation of cataracts in the eye and protect the skin from sun damage.
The body uses vitamin C to
make a chemical called hydroxyproline which plays a key role in the formation of
connective tissue called collagen. The shape and function of all tissues depends on
collagen. Collagen is found in bones, teeth, skin,
tendons, arteries, joints, and the eye. Collagen binds muscle cells together.
Vitamin C promotes the healing of wounds, fractures, bruises, hemorrhages, and isolates
infections. Humans are one of the few creatures that do not produce their own vitamin C
and must obtain it entirely from their diet.
A diet seriously deficient in ascorbic acid will
lead to scurvy, a disease characterized by anemia, subcutaneous hemorrhages, defective
development of bones, cartilage, and gums, plus weakness and lethargy. Scurvy was
prominent among sailors prior to late 1700s. These sailor consumed a diet high in
calories, protein, fat and carbohydrates; but almost entirely lacking in vitamin C. The
introduction of limes to the British sailor's diet eliminated the disease aboard ship
(hence the term "limey," applied to them.) The established RDA is intended to
prevent the symptoms of scurvy.
Vitamin C also stimulates the adrenal
glands to manufacture cortisone, which is involved in healing. The body produces cortisone
to combat stress. Under stress, the body uses more C. Vitamin C also supports immunity, by stimulating the
production of white blood cells (lymphocytes), which fight infections. Studies show
vitamin C can shorten the duration and intensity of colds, asthma and allergies.
| Many nutrition studies report
inadequate levels of vitamin C intake among the general public. Alcohol and tobacco also
have a negative impact on vitamin C status. Studies of vitamin C are ongoing and numerous,
but many of the results are contradictory or inconclusive, leading many in the scientific
community to be skeptical of the claims made on its behalf. The major problem in studying the preventive effects of any
nutrient are the confounding variables of lifestyle and diet. It is extremely difficult,
if not impossible, to isolate a nutrient with as broad a role as vitamin C, and determine
if it is the reason people develop or do not develop a particular disease. The thousands
of potential environmental factors, and the inability to isolate human subjects, leads to
contradictions among studies. The only option is using the one test animal which does not
produce ascorbic acid on its own; the guinea pig. Guinea pigs, however, have proven to be
poor models and very little, if any, proof has been established on human cancer
development based on guinea pig models. The result is a huge body of contradictory
evidence. |
 |
Product Recommendations |
|
One Tablespoon contents: Vitamin C (from calcium ascorbate)
2000 mg, Rose hips 1450 mg, Cranberry fruit
1000 mg, Lemon bioflavins 500 mg ,Calcium (from calcium
ascorbate) 230 mg, Hesperidin 25 mg, Rutin 25 mg |
- 50 % OFF
|
- Body
& Fitness
- Vitamin
C
- 1000
mg
- Time Release
|
|
 |
- Food and Supplemental
Sources
|
- Fresh fruits and vegetables are the best sources of
ascorbic acid. Food must be fresh because when plants die, ascorbic acid quickly oxidizes
and leaves the cells. Freezing has little effect, but canning causes a loss of vitamin C. If the water is removed from canned vegetables
even more C is lost. In order to get the levels of vitamin C specified in food and
nutrition charts, the fruits and vegetables should be sun-ripened, chilled, and used
immediately after harvesting. Boiling vegetables increases the loss of C, unless the water
is consumed as well.
It is best to spread vitamin C intake over the
course of the day. Being water-soluble, it is quickly excreted from the body in urine, and
blood levels of ascorbic acid rise and fall dramatically during the day. In addition, the
likelihood of diarrhea and cramps from stomach acid is reduced.
Because vitamin C is water-soluble, excesses are excreted in the
urine and toxicity is rare. Large quantities may reduce the absorption of selenium and
copper and may lead to kidney stones, but only in people with kidney disease. Tobacco
smoke also has detrimental effects on ascorbic acid levels. Smokers should increase their
vitamin C intake.
 |
- Alternative View
|
- No vitamin has developed as much controversy as
vitamin C. The primary source of the controversy was Linus Pauling, a Nobel prize winner
who challenged the basic assumptions and rationale of the RDA and the National Research
Council. While many nutritionists and scientists challenge the National Research Council's
work, none had quite the respect and credentials of Dr. Pauling.
In what some claim was more spite than science, the
National Research Council responded to Dr. Pauling's vitamin C claims by lowering
the recommended daily allowances from 60 mg in 1968, to 45 mg. in 1976. They have since
been raised back up to 60 mg.
The RDA of 60 mg seems very low, based on many of
the studies which call indicate benefit from intake levels between 1,000 and 5,000 mg. The
RDA is designed to prevent deficiency diseases such as scurvy. For this, 60 mg. is more
than adequate. However, most animals that make their own vitamin C make it in quantities
far greater than humans consume (often in the range of 5,000 - 20,000 mg). This argument
is countered with the point that if humans needed these levels their bodies would have
evolved to eventually make it themselves and that humans are probably more efficient users
of ascorbic acid. The human body also does not make many other substances necessary for
life. To assume that we do not need something because the body doesn't make it is
ridiculous. In order to determine how efficient the human body is at using vitamin C, it
is necessary to know how much the body needs. Science is still trying to answer this
question.
 |
- Sources
|
- There are literally hundreds of supplements
containing some form of vitamin C, either as ascorbic acid or buffered mineral
ascorbates such as calcium ascorbate or Ester C, which are easier on tooth enamel and the
stomach. Natural vitamin C is usually extracted from rose hips, the fleshy base of the
rose. If a 500 mg vitamin c pill were pure rose hip it would be the size of an egg.
Consequently, most vitamin C states "with Rose Hips" to indicate that rose hip
vitamin C is contained, probably at a very small percentage. The balance can be made up of
sugars, starch or molasses, alfalfa grasses, rutin (from buckwheat), acerola or other
cereals. Rose hip is a highly concentrated source of the vitamin, but vitamin C derived
from it confers no special benefit.
|

- Ask the Expert about Vitamin
C Supplements (click)
|
There are more forms of vitamin C than any other vitamin. It is available in
tablet, chewable tablet, capsule, powder, crystal, liquid, in gum form, buffered,
protein-coated, time-released, and with bioflavonoids. Chewable C is often made from the
tropical acerola berry to make it more palatable, but often contains a lot of sugar. When
taken in chewable form, as a powder, or liquid, the vitamin should be washed from the
mouth as residue can negatively impact tooth enamel. Many nutritionists recommend taking
vitamin c combined with a bioflavonoid mixture, usually made from the rind of citrus
fruit. This form is reported to allow for better absorption into the blood stream, but the
claim, like so much about vitamin c, is controversial.
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