Guest
On Wednesday, October 9, 2013 3:41:29 AM UTC-4, Jamie M wrote:
My Mom worked for a glam doctor, catering to the ultra-elites.
She'd regularly infuse 50-75g vitamin C, I.V. He was a good
man and a good doctor--and the patients insisted it did them
good--but I never saw the evidence to support it.
In fact, giving lovely anti-oxidant supplements to lungcancer
patients makes their cancer cells much healthier, which is
not exactly what the patients were hoping for.
Cheers,
James Arthur
Vitamin C is produced by most animals as it is essential, humans have
a genetic defect in one of the four genes that are required to
synthesize vitamin C, so the only source is through diet. Animals under
stress or illness apparently greatly increase the rate of synthesis of
vitamin C, up to hundreds of grams per day in some cases I have heard,
ie goats.
It makes sense that this could be beneficial when given to people in
large doses during illness, and to prevent chronic low grade scurvy
like symptoms, ie vitamin C is required for collagen connective tissue
to form, and low grade lack of vitamin C can cause undiagnosed scurvy
symptoms, such as improperly formed connective tissue. Also taking
vitamin C supplements can strengthen and thicken blood vessel tissue,
in one study medical scans showed thickening of blood vessel walls in
the neck after taking vitamin C supplementation, which some would
interpret as bad, but is actually a good thing in this case as it is
the wall and not arterial plaques causing the thickening.
Vitamin C is one of the most active compounds in the body involved in
many reactions. If humans could synthesize it and produced in the
amounts as required we would be much healthier I think!
My Mom worked for a glam doctor, catering to the ultra-elites.
She'd regularly infuse 50-75g vitamin C, I.V. He was a good
man and a good doctor--and the patients insisted it did them
good--but I never saw the evidence to support it.
In fact, giving lovely anti-oxidant supplements to lungcancer
patients makes their cancer cells much healthier, which is
not exactly what the patients were hoping for.
Cheers,
James Arthur