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For information on the singer by the name of Vitamin C, see Colleen Fitzpatrick
Chemical make-up of vitamin C
Vitamin C is a water-soluble vitamin used by the body for several purposes. Most animals can synthesize their own vitamin C, but some animals, including guinea pigs, humans, and other primates, cannot. Vitamin C was first isolated in 1928,
and in 1932 it was proved to be the agent which prevents scurvy.
Vitamin C is the L-enantiomer of ascorbic acid. Commercial vitamin C is often a mix of ascorbic acid, sodium ascorbate and/or other
ascorbates. See the ascorbic acid article for a description of the
molecule's chemical properties.
Discovery and History
The need to include fresh plant food in the diet to prevent disease was known from ancient times. Native peoples living in
marginal areas incorporated this into their medicinal lore. For example, infusions of pine needles are used in the arctic zone,
or the leaves from species of drought resistant trees in desert areas.
Through history the benefit of plant food for the survival of sieges and long sea voyages was recommended by enlightened
authorities. In the seventeenth century Richard Woodall, a ship's surgeon
to the British East India Company, recommended
the use of lemon juice as a preventive and cure in his book "Surgeon's Mate" The early
eighteenth century Dutch writer, Johannes Bachstrom gave the firm opinion that "scurvy is solely owing to a total abstinence from
fresh vegetable food, and greens; which is alone the primary cause of the disease."
The first attempt to give scientific basis for the cause of scurvy was by a ship's surgeon in the British Royal Navy, James Lind, who at sea in
May 1747 provided some crew members with lemon juice in addition to normal rations while
others continued on normal rations alone. In the history of
science this is considered to be the first example of a controlled experiment comparing results on two populations of a
factor applied to one group only with all other factors the same. The results conclusively showed that lemons prevented the
disease. Lind wrote up his work and published it in 1753.
Lind's work was slow to be noticed, partly because he gave conflicting evidence within the book and partly because of social
inertia in some elements at the British admiralty who saw care for the well being of ships' crew as a sign of weakness. It was
1795 before the British navy adopted lemon or lime juice as standard issue at sea. (This practice is probably what led to the nickname limey for British people, especially British
sailors.)
The name antiscorbutic was used in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as general term for those foods know to prevent
scurvy even though there was no understanding of the reason for this. As well as lemons, limes and oranges ; sauerkraut, salted cabbage, malt, and portable broth were employed with variable
effect. James Cook relied on sauerkraut to prevent the disease on his voyages
of exploration.
In 1907, Alex Holst and Theodore Frohlich, two Norwegian biochemists studying
beriberi contracted aboard ship's crews in the Norwegian Fishing Fleet, wanted a
small test mammal to substitute for the pigeons then used. They fed guinea pigs the
test diet, which had earlier produced beriberi in their pigeons, and were surprised
when scurvy resulted instead. Until that time scurvy had not been observed in any organism apart from humans and was considered a
completely human disease.
In 1928 the arctic anthropologist and adventurer Vilhjalmur Stefansson
attempted to prove his theory of how Eskimo (Inuit) people are able to avoid scurvy with almost no plant food in their diet. This had long been a puzzle because
the disease had struck European arctic explorers living on similar high meat diets. Stefansson theorised that the native peoples
of the arctic got their vitamin C from meat and offal that was raw or minimally cooked. Starting in February 1928 for one year he
and a colleague lived on an animal flesh only diet under medical supervision at New
York's Bellevue
Hospital and remained healthy.
In the early twentieth century, the Polish American scientist Casimir Funk conducted research into deficiency diseases and in 1912 formulated the concept of vitamins, for the elements in food which are essential to health.
Then, from 1928 to 1933, the Hungarian research team of Joseph L Svirbely and Albert
Szent-Gyorgyi, and independently the American Charles Glen King, first
isolated vitamin C and showed it to be ascorbic acid.
In 1933/1934, the British chemists Sir Walter Norman Haworth and Sir Edmund Hirst, and independently the
Polish Tadeus
Reichstein, succeeded in synthesizing the vitamin, the first to be artificially produced. This made possible the cheap mass
production of vitamin C. Haworth was awarded the 1937 Nobel Prize for Chemistry largely for this work.
In 1959 the American J.J. Burns showed that the reason why some mammals were susceptible to scurvy was due to the
inability of their livers to produce the active enzyme L-gulonolactone oxidase, which is
the last of the chain of four enzymes which synthesise ascorbic acid.
Sources
Plant sources
Citrus fruits (lime, lemon, orange, grapefruit) and tomatoes are good common
sources of vitamin C. Other foods that are good sources of vitamin C include papaya,
broccoli, brussels
sprouts, blackcurrants, strawberries, cauliflower, spinach, cantaloupe, and kiwifruit.
The amount of vitamin C in foods of plant origin depends on:
- the precise variety of the plant,
- the soil condition
- the climate in which it grew,
- the length of time since it was picked,
- the storage conditions,
- the method of preparation. Cooking in particular destroys vitamin C.
The following table is approximate and shows the relative abundance in different sources.
Animal sources
Most species of animals synthesise their own vitamin C. It is therefore not a vitamin for them. Synthesis is achieved through
a sequence of enzyme driven steps, which convert glucose to ascorbic acid. It is carried out either in the kidneys, in
reptiles and birds, or the liver, in mammals and perching birds. The loss of an enzyme concerned with ascorbic acid synthesis has occurred quite frequently in evolution and has affected most fish, many birds; some bats, guinea pigs
and most but not all primates, including Man. The mutations have not been lethal because ascorbic acid is so prevalent in the surrounding food sources.
For example an adult goat can internally manufacture more than 13,000 mg of vitamin C
per day in normal health and as much as 100,000 mg daily when faced with life-threatening disease.
It was only realised in the 1920s that some cuts of meat and fish are also a source of vitamin C for humans. The muscle and
fat which make up the modern western diet are however poor sources. As with fruit and vegetables cooking destroys the vitamin C
content.
Table Showing Relative Abundance of Vitamin C in Foods of Animal Origin
| Food of animal origin |
mg vitamin C per 100 grams food |
Food of animal origin (contd) |
mg vitamin C per 100 grams food |
Food of animal origin (contd) |
mg vitamin C per 100 grams food |
| Calf liver (raw) |
36 |
Chicken liver (fried ) |
13 |
Goats milk (fresh) |
2 |
| Beef liver (raw) |
31 |
Lamb liver (Fried) |
12 |
Beef steak (fried) |
0 |
| Oysters (raw) |
30 |
Lamb heart (roast) |
11 |
Hens egg (raw ) |
0 |
| Cod Roe (fried) |
26 |
Lamb tongue (stewed) |
6 |
Pork Bacon (fried) |
0 |
| Pork liver (raw) |
23 |
Human milk (fresh) |
4 |
Calf veal cutlet (fried) |
0 |
| Lamb brain (boiled) |
17 |
Cows milk (fresh) |
2 |
Chicken leg (roast) |
0 |
Artificial chemical synthesis
Vitamin C is produced from glucose by two main routes. The Reichstein process
developed in the 1930s uses a single pre-fermentation followed by a purely chemical route. The more modern Two-Step fermentation
process was originally developed in China in the 1960s, uses additional fermentation to
replace part of the later chemical stages. Both processes yield approximately 60% vitamin C from the glucose feed.
In 1934, the Swiss pharmaceutical company Hoffmann-La Roche
was the first to mass produce synthetic vitamin C, under the brand name of Redoxon. Main producers today are BASF/ Takeda, Roche, Merck and the China Pharmaceutical Group Ltd of the
People's Republic of China.
Functions of vitamin C in the body
- Vitamin C is also needed to synthesise carnitine, important in the tranfer of
energy to the cell mitochondria.
- The brain, spleen, lung, testicle, lymph nodes, liver, thyroid, small intestinal mucosa, leukocytes,
pancreas, kidney and salivary glands usually have 10 to 50 times the concentration present in
plasma.
Vitamin C deficiency
Lack of ascorbic acid in the daily diet leads to a disease called scurvy, a form of
avitaminosis that is characterized by:
Daily requirement
A healthy person on a balanced western diet should be able to get all the vitamin C needed to prevent the symptoms of scurvy
from their daily diet. People who smoke, those under stress and women in pregnancy have a slightly higher requirement.
The amount of vitamin C needed to avoid deficiency symptoms and maintain health has been set by variously national agencies as
follows:-
4O mg per day UK Food Standards Agency
60-95 mg per day US Food and Nutrition Board 2001 revision.
Some researchers have calculated the amount needed for an adult human to achieve similar blood serum levels as Vitamin C
synthesising mammals as follows:-
200 mg per day - Linus Pauling Institute & US National Institutes of Health (NIH) Recommendation.
3000 mg per day - Vitamin C Foundation's recommendation.
6000-12000 mg per day – Thomas Levy , Colorado Integrative Medical Centre recommendation.
6000-18000 mg per day - Linus Pauling's daily recommendation
High doses (thousands of mg) may result in diarrhoea, which is harmless if the
dose is reduced immediately. Some researchers (Cathcart) claim the onset of diarrhoea to be an indication of where the
body’s true vitamin C requirement lies.
The small size of the ascorbic acid molecule means the kidneys cannot retain it in the body. Quite a low level in the blood
serum will cause traces to be present in the urine. All vitamin C synthesising mammals have traces in the urine at all times.
In April 1998 Nature reported alleged carcinogenic and teratogenic effects of excessive doses of
vitamin C. This was given great prominence in the world's media. The effects were noted in test tube experiments and on only two
of the 20 markers of free radical damage to DNA. They have not been supported by further evidence from living organisms. Almost
all mammals manufacture their own vitamin C in amounts equivalent to human doses of thousands of milligrams per day. Large
amounts of the vitamin are used in orthomolecular
medicine and no harmful effects have been observed even in doses of 10,000 mg per day or more.
Therapeutic uses
Vitamin C is needed in the diet to prevent scurvy. It also has a reputation for
being useful in the treatment of colds and flu. The
evidence to support this idea, however, is ambiguous and the effect may depend on the dose size and dosing regime. The Vitamin C
foundation (1 ) recommends 8 grams of vitamin C every half hour in
order to show an effect on the symptoms of a cold infection that is in progress.
Vitamin C advocacy
Fred R. Klenner, a
doctor in Reidsville, North Carolina reported
in 1949 that poliomyelitis yielded to vitamin C.
Nobel Prize winning chemist Linus Pauling began actively promoting vitamin C in the 1960s as a
means to greatly improve human health and resistance to disease.
A minority of medical and scientific opinion continues to see vitamin C as being a low cost and safe way to treat infectious
disease and to deal with a wide range of poisons. A megadose of one-half gram per pound of body weight (one gram per kilogram of body weight) per day of
sodium ascorbate salt has been found of theraputic use in both human and veterinary treatments.
A meta-study into the published research on effectiveness of ascorbic acid in the treatment of infectious disease and toxins
was conducted, in 2002, by Thomas Levy, Medical Director of the Colorado Integrative
Medical Center in Denver. It claimed that overwhelming scientific
evidence exists for its therapeutic role.
Some vitamin C advocates hold that the wider adoption of vitamin C for therapeutic use is hindered by the fact that it cannot
now be patented, meaning that pharmaceutical companies will be
unwilling to fund research or promotion of a substance in which they stand to make little profit and which will compete with some
of their own patented medicines.
References
Thomas Levy (September 2002), Vitamin C, Infectious Diseases, and Toxins , Xlibris Corporation (Paperback). ISBN 1401069630 (print-on-demand
publisher)
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