Ascorbic Acid versus Vitamin C Complex

What is vitamin C? Is there such a thing as a vitamin C complex? Why do so many people now believe in the complex?

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IsabelH
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Ascorbic Acid versus Vitamin C Complex

Post Number:#1  Post by IsabelH » Fri Jan 06, 2012 3:59 pm

This article is on the http://www.sott.net webpage today. I paste it below with the hope that those more knowledgeable/experienced re the "argument" will appropriately respond here & even perhaps, at the article on the sott.net page.
Thank you.

200 Reasons To Love Vitamin C
Sayer Ji
GreenMedInfo
Thu, 05 Jan 2012 15:00 CST


Vitamin C is generally considered to be an important "nutrient," but its perceived value usually ends there. Only rarely does the public (and the medical profession) glimpse its true potential in the prevention and treatment of disease -- and this because, by legal definition (in the US), only FDA-approved drugs can prevent, treat and cure disease. only because

This does not mean, however, that essential nutrients like Vitamin C cannot in fact prevent and treat disease, i.e. it is illegal to speak truthfully about something, doesn't mean that that something isn't true. The National Library of Medicine, in fact, contains thousands of studies demonstrating vitamin C's ability to significantly improve health, with 220 disease applications documented on the research site GreenMedInfo.com alone. The best thing 'we the people' can do, despite our lack of medical degrees and licensure, and without the FDA's iron-fisted legal and regulatory apparatus on our side, is to use the peer-reviewed research at our disposal to inform and protect our treatment decisions.

Perhaps we must revisit an important moment in history to regain a sense of how profoundly vitamin C deficiency and vitamin C therapy can affect health. James Lind (1716-1794), pioneer of naval hygiene in the British Royal Navy, conducted the first ever clinical trial proving that citrus fruits cured scurvy. Lind's discovery saved tens of thousands of seamen from the ravages of scurvy, spurring England's naval supremacy, putatively changing the course of world history.

If significant historical events like these don't provide enough evidence to vindicate the efficacy of nutrients like Vitamin C, molecular biology and the science of genetics can help to fill in the gaps.

It is a little known and under-appreciated fact that all humans are born with a serious, life-threatening genetic defect: namely, the inability to manufacture Vitamin C.

This defect occurred approximately 63 million years ago, when our haplorrhini ("simple nosed") primate predecessors lost the gene (Gulnolactone oxidase pseudogene - GULOP), responsible for the manufacture of Vitamin C from glucose.

The ability to synthesize Vitamin C, in fact, has been lost several times in vertebrates, e.g. in guinea pigs, some bats, some fishes, passeriform birds and in primates of the suborder Haplorrhini, which includes monkes, apes and humans.

It was Linus Pauling, two time Nobel Laurette, and the world's foremost vitamin C proponent, who first brought this inborn error of metabolism to popular light. Pauling advocated taking large doses of Vitamin C (up to 10-12 grams a day) in order to offset the deficiencies of our modern diet. He believed that it was our movement away from a vitamin C rich fruit-and-vegetable based diet that explained the modern epidemic of heart disease.

According to this perspective, without adequate Vitamin C we are unable to produce the collagen necessary to heal our arteries. The Vitamin C starved body compensates for this by increasing the production of a very small and sticky type of cholesterol known as lipoprotein A, which leads to the formation of atheromatous plaque (clogged arteries). Linus Pauling advocated taking large amounts of vitamin C in combination with the amino acid lysine to reverse the damage done to the arteries, and to prevent recurrence.*

Indeed, a study published in 2008 showed that higher plasma vitamin C levels are associated with a significantly reduced risk of stroke. Scientists from the clinical gerontology unit at Addnbrooke's University Hospital in Cambridge, UK, tracked 20,649 men and women aged 40 to 79 years, between 1993 and 1997. The group was followed through March 2005. Individuals who had the highest vitamin C levels showed a 42% reduction in stroke risk! If you compare this with Plavix's 8.7 - 9.4% risk reduction, and the profound side effects drugs like these generate, one begins to understand why the media projection of "vitamins are toxic" propaganda serves only the interests of the drug companies.

Before one goes out and buys a bargain bottle of Vitamin C tablets, one should be advised that ascorbic acid is not exactly the same thing as Vitamin C. Ascorbic acid is found within the Vitamin C complex as it exists in food, but is only one of a number of inseparable cofactors, such as rutin, bioflavonoids (vitamin p), factor k, factor j, factor p, ascorbinogen, protein chaperones, and various enzymes like tyrosinase, which together in their entirety constitute the whole food complex.

Ascorbic acid is also 10 times more acidic than the naturally buffered Vitamin C found in raw food, and will on occasions lead to stomach upset, calcium loss from the bones, and kidney stones, in susceptible individuals. Traditionally ascorbic acid is produced semi-synthetically from corn or rice starch through a heavily chemical dependent process. Ascorbic acid can be considered no more natural than white flour, and yet despite this fact, has very little toxicity relative to pharmaceuticals, and can be used in much higher doses than the FDA's Recommended Daily Allowance without adverse side effects.

The difference between ascorbic acid and Vitamin C in whole food form was perfectly clear to Szent-Gyorgi who received a Nobel Prize in 1937 for discovering Vitamin C. Even though Szent-Gyorgi received international recognition for identifying ascorbic acid as Vitamin C, his later research lead him to conclude that ascorbic acid had very little anti-scurvy activity in and of itself. Szent-Gyorgi found that the vitamin C found in organ meats and food sources like paprika, where the aforementioned cofactors are intact, were far superior in combating scurvy. We would be well served to acknowledge that all raw fruits and vegetables contain a "life force" that cannot be fully decomposed or reduced to the chemical skeleton within which the life force of "vitamin activity" works, no more than our life/soul can be reduced to the $10 or so worth of chemical building blocks that our body is composed of. Fortunately there are vitamin manufacturers out there who acknowledge this fact, and produce raw whole food concentrates rich in vitamin activity. When eating raw, organic fruits and vegetables is not an option, or when higher levels are needed, these supplements offer authentic therapeutic activity.

The history of vitamin C illustrates just how profoundly important it is for us to get these vital nutrients known as "vitamins," and that they are best derived from food. If we choose to overlook the importance of vitamins in maintaining health, and yes, even preventing and reversing disease, we will be forced to accept a pharmaceutically driven medical perspective that believes that health is the absence of symptoms, and that symptoms are to be combated or driven back deep into our bodies with sublethal dosages of toxic chemicals, i.e. drugs. Such a perspective on disease is itself so diseased that there is no escaping the ill health that results from it. We must remember that there has never been a disease that has been caused by a lack of a drug.....therefore, why would it ever be considered sound medical practice to treat disease with drugs, as a first line of treatment?

*If Linus Pauling and other Vitamin C researchers are correct and a deficiency of Vitamin C causes the breakdown of collagen in the artery, aspirin therapy, which causes Vitamin C deficiency, would not be considered a safe way to reduce cardiac mortality. To the contrary, it would further destabilize the strength and elasticity of the artery leading to hemorrhage, which is the primary deadly side effect of aspirin therapy.

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Re: Ascorbic Acid versus Vitamin C Complex

Post Number:#2  Post by majkinetor » Sat Jan 07, 2012 8:42 am

Disinformation.

There are lot of topics here covering this, I think even this exact peace of info was covered.

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Re: Ascorbic Acid versus Vitamin C Complex

Post Number:#3  Post by Lemonaid » Sat Jan 07, 2012 11:42 am

Animals synthesize ascorbate from glucose. They don't synthesize "factor P" (whatever that is).

Scurvy has not been shown to be a lack of "factor J" (whatever that is).

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Re: Ascorbic Acid versus Vitamin C Complex

Post Number:#4  Post by ofonorow » Sun Jan 08, 2012 6:25 am

The article was good up to this point,
Before one goes out and buys a bargain bottle of Vitamin C tablets, one should be advised that ascorbic acid is not exactly the same thing as Vitamin C. Ascorbic acid is found within the Vitamin C complex as it exists in food, but is only one of a number of inseparable cofactors, such as rutin, bioflavonoids (vitamin p), factor k, factor j, factor p, ascorbinogen, protein chaperones, and various enzymes like tyrosinase, which together in their entirety constitute the whole food complex.


False. There is no science that substantiates this claim that such a complex is vitamin C. None. These complexes may exist in certain foods or fruits, but they have nothing to do with the basic function of vitamin C - curing/preventing scurvy. Only the ascorbate ion (vitamin C) can prevent and cure scurvy. There is no more established fact in science than of what vitamin C is.

Ascorbic acid is also 10 times more acidic than the naturally buffered Vitamin C found in raw food, and will on occasions lead to stomach upset, calcium loss from the bones, and kidney stones, in susceptible individuals.

This claim is that foods contain mineral ascorbates, e.g. sodium or calcium ascorbate, which may or may not be true, but is largely irrelevant. The true source of "natural" vitamin C for 99.99% of mammals and other high order species are their livers or kidneys. The form of ascorbate endogenously produced is arguably ascorbic acid, but it may form sodium ascorbate when it reaches the blood stream. Different authors have different opinions. (Certainly no "complex" is produced endogenously.)

Calcium loss from bones from taking "too much" vitamin C is an outright lie. I agree with Dr. Levy that osteoporosis is "bone scurvy" - caused by a lack of vitamin C. Those who take high amounts of vitamin C have very strong bones. We have covered kidney stones on many many occasions, and for at least half the common stones, vitamin C as acorbic acid would PREVENT them. (It is always a good idea to increase vitamin B6/magnesium in people prone to kidney stones.)


Traditionally ascorbic acid is produced semi-synthetically from corn or rice starch through a heavily chemical dependent process. Ascorbic acid can be considered no more natural than white flour, and yet despite this fact, has very little toxicity relative to pharmaceuticals, and can be used in much higher doses than the FDA's Recommended Daily Allowance without adverse side effects.


Comparing ascorbic acid with "white flower" is misleading. Is the 4 step process in the liver which converts glucose to vitamin C in most animals a "heavily chemical dependent process"?

The difference between ascorbic acid and Vitamin C in whole food form was perfectly clear to Szent-Gyorgi who received a Nobel Prize in 1937 for discovering Vitamin C. Even though Szent-Gyorgi received international recognition for identifying ascorbic acid as Vitamin C, his later research lead him to conclude that ascorbic acid had very little anti-scurvy activity in and of itself. Szent-Gyorgi found that the vitamin C found in organ meats and food sources like paprika, where the aforementioned cofactors are intact, were far superior in combating scurvy.

This is a lie. We know this because of Dr. Szent-Gyorgi's 1937 Nobel Prize paper in which he points out how they proved the isolated ascorbic acid was vitamin C.
http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/1937/szent-gyorgyi-lecture.pdf

Szent-Gyorgyi wrote:
"This was the first proof that ascorbic acid was identical with vitamin C".



We would be well served to acknowledge that all raw fruits and vegetables contain a "life force" that cannot be fully decomposed or reduced to the chemical skeleton within which the life force of "vitamin activity" works, no more than our life/soul can be reduced to the $10 or so worth of chemical building blocks that our body is composed of.

Even if this were "true" (where is the science?), what happens to the "life force" when the plants containing the life force die during food processing? This implies that vitamin C in foods is superior because the plants were once alive. There is no evidence for this, and as we point out in this article, http://vitamincfoundation.org/NaturalC.htm, plants have a evolutionary reason to not be necessarily good for us. Their long-term survival depends on not being eaten.

Fortunately there are vitamin manufacturers out there who acknowledge this fact, and produce raw whole food concentrates rich in vitamin activity. When eating raw, organic fruits and vegetables is not an option, or when higher levels are needed, these supplements offer authentic therapeutic activity.

And the "authentic therapeutic activity" comes at a steep price, some "natural" brands have been priced at more than a thousand times the cost of the evil synthetic vitamin C. The amounts are so small in these products, that people would be better off eating a few oranges.

The history of vitamin C illustrates just how profoundly important it is for us to get these vital nutrients known as "vitamins," and that they are best derived from food.


The history lately seems to show that people can be gullible and will readily accept non-science as truth when combined with an emotional "natural" appeal. It is the history of all the essential nutrients (not just vitamin C) that shows how important these nutrients are. You would quickly die if you don't get an essential nutrient. But the argument that vitamins are always "best" when derived from food is hard to support. Especially in the case of "bio identical" vitamins where are chemically identical with the molecules found in plants.
Owen R. Fonorow
HeartCURE.Info
American Scientist's Invention Could Prevent 350,000 Heart Bypass Operations a year


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