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Home :: Supplements
The dangers and benefits of vitamin C...
Ever since Linus Pauling advocated large doses as a cure for the
common cold, the benefits of vitamin C have always been a controversial
subject. Many of the claims Pauling made about vitamin C attracted
attention because he won the coveted Nobel Prize in both chemistry
and peace.
You'll often see vitamin C called ascorbic acid, a term that literally
means "no scurvy". Some 250 years ago, a British physician
found that sailors given citrus fruits were cured of scurvy (which
is the result of a vitamin C deficiency).
Unfortunately, the British Navy waited 50 years until they acted
on this information and required all its vessels to provide lime
juice to every sailor. The term limey was given to British
sailors because of this requirement.
Dehydroascorbic acid and ascorbic acid are the active forms of
vitamin C found in food. Most supplements contain only ascorbic
acid. Levels of ascorbic acid in the blood rise to the same degree
following the consumption of both vitamin C containing foods and
ascorbic acid.
Because of this, some have concluded that supplements offer the
same benefit as food. However, this ignores the fact that dehydroascorbic
acid (the other active form of vitamin C) may have positive effects other than
that of raising ascorbic acid levels [19]. In fact, your body can
absorb and use both forms of vitamin C [29].
One of the main benefits of vitamin C is its function as an antioxidant.
If you leave an iron nail outside, it will rust. Slice an apple
in half, and it turns brown. Both are examples of oxidation, defined
as a chemical reaction that involves the loss of an electron from
an atom. Dip a sliced apple in lemon juice, however, and the rate
at which the apple turns brown is slowed. That's because the vitamin
C in the lemon juice slows the rate of oxidative damage.
Free radicals are molecules with an unpaired electron. In this
state, they're highly reactive and destructive to everything that
gets in their way.
Although free radicals have been implicated in many diseases,
including heart disease and cancer, they're actually a normal part
of your body chemistry, and can help to keep you healthy. White
blood cells, for example, use free radicals to "attack" viruses
and bacteria.
Optimal health, however, requires a balance between free radical generation and
antioxidant protection. One of the functions of an antioxidant
is to "quench" these free radicals before they create
too much damage.
However, there is research to show that vitamin C may act as a pro-oxidant
[15]. In other words, vitamin C, under certain conditions anyway,
may act in a manner that is opposite to its intended purpose.
This has raised concern among thousands of people who supplement
their diets with vitamin C because of its antioxidant benefits.
So, is vitamin C all it's cracked up to be? Does it really offer
all the health benefits most of us believe in?
Vitamin C and other antioxidants are often recommended on the
basis that they improve athletic performance.
And it's true that...
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