http://www.autism.com/ari/editorials/vitaminc.html
Vitamin C is an extremely safe substance which is immensely beneficial to
the brain and body in a multitude of ways. Its potential for preventing and
treating autism has barely been touched.
Vitamin C is heavily concentrated in the brain, but its exact role in brain
function is not understood. A recent Medline search turned up 400 references
referring to vitamin C and the brain, but the mystery remains.
We don't need to understand its biochemistry to know that vitamin C is
crucial to brain function. The earliest signs of vitamin C deficiency are confusion
and depression. Vitamin C also improves cognition, as shown by increased IQ
scores in normal and Down's children. Other studies have shown improved EEGs
and alertness, as measured in a variety of ways. Hoffer and Osmond, in a series
of brilliant studies, showed vitamin C's effectiveness in treating
schizophrenia.
Most of what we hear of vitamin C relates to its role in destroying viruses
and bacteria. A 1995 review by Hemilii and Herinan cited 21 placebo-controlled
studies in which giving 1 or more grams of C daily significantly reduced the
severity and duration of colds. (It doesn't prevent colds, it mitigates
colds.) In ARRI 12-1, I discussed the work of Australian physician
Archie Kalokarinos, who used vitamin C to reduce the vaccine caused death rate
of aborigine infants from 50 percent to zero.
But vitamin C's anti-germ defense is only one of its many roles in the body.
Irwin Stone's superb book The Healing Factor: Vitamin C Against Disease
discusses many other ways in which vitamin C protects the body against
substances implicated as causative of some cases of autism. A few examples:
The second study of vitamin C in autism was
conducted by Dolske et al. (1993). The study consisted of a 30-week
double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 52 mg/lb. per day as a treatment for
18 autistic children (ages 6 to 19) in a residential setting. Statistically
significant improvement on various outcome measures was reported. Clearly,
Dolske's higher dosage produced better results than our earlier study of
vitamin C. But what is the right dose for autism? Nobody knows. But vitamin C
is extremely safe, even in massive doses, so it would be well to find out what
the optimal dose for autism might be.
What is the safe dose of vitamin C? A lot. Vitamin C
expert Robert Cathcart proposes the "bowel tolerance" method of determining
one's own vitamin C requirement. You simply take increasingly large amounts of
vitamin C each day until your body reaches the vitamin C saturation point.
Going beyond that level, the vitamin C becomes a laxative. For most people in
good health, the well-tolerated level tends to be about 10 to 15 grams of
vitamin C per day. If you start to get sick, your body requires more vitamin C,
and your "bowel tolerance" may rise to 30 or 100 or more grams per
day. But, according to Cathcart and other experts on vitamin C, increasing your
input when you are sick will dramatically abbreviate your illness. Cathcart's
patients with mononucleosis were functioning normally after a few days of 200
grams per day of vitamin C, given orally and IV, while the patients of the
other doctors in the same community were hospitalized for several weeks during
a mononucleosis outbreak. Dr. Cathcart's website: http://www.orthomed.com/
When my teenage daughter Helen was hospitalized with "terminal"
(stage 4B) Hodgkin's disease in 1974, I put her on 40 grains of vitamin C per
day (526 mg/lb.). Her doctors were aghast: "You'll kill her!"
"Nonsense!" I replied. She recovered quickly, and 24 years later is
in vibrant good health. (For more about Helen, see page 7.)
In 1966 VanderKamp published a seldom-cited but significant paper showing
that adult schizophrenic men required 36 to 48 grams of vitamin C a day to
reach the vitamin C saturation level that control group men reached by taking 4
grams of vitamin C per day. Saturation level was measured by a simple test in
which one drop of urine is added to a test tube containing a reagent.
I found fascinating not only the fact that schizophrenics needed 10 times as
much as the normal controls, but that the high doses of vitamin C brought about
marked improvement in the socialization of the patients. While the
patients were by no means cured, they "expressed a feeling of well being.
The anxious, tense facial expression was replaced with a smile and
friendliness. They stated that they didn't feel so 'hemmed in.' 'People didn't
seem to be against me. 'I can now think more clearly.' Those who were shy,
seclusive and withdrawn began to participate in ward activities, in
conversation with other patients and ward personnel."
Obviously, autism and schizophrenia are very different disorders (as I
emphasized in my 1964 book Infantile Autism), but the enhanced
socialization that VanderKamp reported in his schizophrenic patients would certainly
be welcome among autistic patients, particularly those with Asperger syndrome.
I hope that there are a few readers out there who are as curious as I am about
what the outcome might be if the VanderKamp studies were repeated on Aspergers
or autistic patients.
Other researchers have also reported improvement in the personalities of
psychiatric patients on high doses of vitamin C. Milner (1963), for example,
reported "statistically significant improvement in the depressive, manic
and paranoid symptom complexes, together with an improvement in overall
personality functioning ...."
Research also has shown vitamin C to bring about improvement in patients
with depression and manic depressive illness, which, as I pointed out in Infantile
Autism, do appear to be genetically related to autism.
If vitamin C is used in large amounts, most experts suggest that buffered
vitamin C (sodium ascorbate) should be used rather than ascorbic acid, since
the acid form may be too acidic in multi-gram doses. Sodium ascorbate powder (1
level tsp. equals 4 grams) may be purchased inexpensively by the pound or the
kilogram from the Wholesale Nutrition Company (1-800-325-2664) or from Bronson
(1-800-610-4848).
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INFORMATION, DATA, AND MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR
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AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO
VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU
ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.