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Vitamin C Therapy
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Notes On Orthomolecular
(Megavitamin) Use of Vitamin C
Vitamin C (ascorbate, ascorbic acid) has
varying activity in the body at varying levels of intake. At low levels of
consumption, vitamin C is like a trace nutrient: you need very little of it
to stay alive, but without any at all you die. Even a few milligrams a day
will suffice to preserve life. At moderate levels of consumption, say 500 to
1,500 mg per day for an adult, the vitamin works to build health in a
positive sense. statistically, fewer colds will be reported; incidence,
severity and duration of influenza will be less. (Stone, The Healing
Factor, 1972 and Pauling, Vitamin C, the Common Cold and the Flu,
1976). But it is at high levels, say 8,000 to 40,000 mg per day for an adult,
that we begin to obtain therapeutic properties for the vitamin.
At the proper (high) level, vitamin C
has anti-histamine, anti-toxin, and anti-biotic properties. The pharmacological effects of a vitamin at high
concentration do not disqualify our continuing to call it, and think of it,
as a vitamin. Money still buys things even if you have a lot of it; its
nature has not changed but its power has. If it takes 50 gallons of gas to
drive from New York City to Milwaukee, you simply are not going to make it on
10 gallons, no matter how you try. Likewise, if your body wants 35,000 mg of
vitamin C to fight an infection, 7,000 mg won't do. The key is to take enough
C, take it often enough, and take it long enough.
QUANTITY, FREQUENCY and DURATION are
the keys to effective orthomolecular use of vitamin C. So many people hold a philosophical viewpoint such
as "I shouldn't have to take so much of a vitamin." That's
certainly true; you do not have to. This is America, where everyone has the
right to be sick if they want to. But if you want swift recovery, and if you
want to use vitamin C, you might just as well use it effectively. What we are
interested in is results. High doses of vitamin C gets those results as well
or better than any broad-spectrum drug on the market. Rather than take what
we think the body should require, we take the amount of C that the body says
it wants.
The safety of vitamin C is
extraordinary. There is not one
case of vitamin C toxicity anywhere in the world's medical literature. There
is not one case of vitamin C-caused kidney stone ever proven, to the best of
my knowledge. Vitamin C has been used to prevent and cure the formation of
kidney stones since William J. McCormick, M.D. used it in 1946 (Medical
Record 159:7, p 410-413). 10,000 mg of ascorbic acid per day does not
significantly increase urinary excretion of calcium (Linus Pauling
Institute Newsletter "Effect of High Intake of Ascorbic Acid on
Excretion of Calcium" by Dr. C. Tsao, 2:3, 1983). Daily doses of over
120,000 mg have been used with safety by medical doctors, and guinea pigs
have been given the human daily dose equivalent of 500,000 mg without harm.
The major side effect of vitamin C overload is an unmistakable
5-times-an-hour diarrhea. This indicates absolute saturation, and the daily
dose is then dropped to the highest amount that will not bring about
diarrhea. That is a THERAPEUTIC level. Robert Cathcart, M.D. of California
routinely employs high-ascorbic acid therapy with his patients with success (Journal
of Orthomolecular Psychiatry, 2nd Quarter, 1981). Frederick R. Klenner,
M.D. of North Carolina has seen cures of diphtheria, staph and strep
infections, herpes, mumps, spinal meningitis, mononucleosis, shock, viral
hepatitis, arthritis and polio using high doses of vitamin C (Journal of
Preventive Medicine, Spring, 1974). Dr. Klenner says: "Ascorbic acid
is the safest and the most valuable substance available to the
physician" and "If you want results, use adequate ascorbic
acid."
Copyright C
1983, 1994 Andrew W. Saul. From the book PAPERBACK CLINIC, available
from Dr. Andrew Saul, Number 8 Van Buren Street, Holley, New York
14470.
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