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Just What Are
Your Optimal Levels of Vitamin C Intake?
Amongst the general public today,
vitamin C is probably the most popular of all nutritional
supplements, perhaps principally because it is widely believed to
be effective as a cure for the common cold. But there is
much more to the nutrient than this, as was demonstrated by the
celebrated Dr Linus Pauling, whose pioneering work hailed optimal
intakes of vitamin C as a powerful weapon against flu, heart
disease and even cancer.
Pauling’s books became extremely popular, but it almost
goes without saying that the medical establishment was quick to
ridicule his ideas and still largely refuses to recognise the
value of large doses of vitamin C. Not that either the
public or Pauling, a double Nobel Laureate, seemed to care
much. He regularly took doses of well in excess of 1,000 mg
daily, and was working almost until the end of his incredibly
active 93 year life.
As well as the happy coincidence of Pauling’s longevity,
if coincidence it is; a great deal of research now supports his
claims for vitamin C, as well as recognising it as one of
nature’s most powerful anti-oxidants and anti-ageing
nutrients. But despite this, the Recommended Dietary
Allowance (RDA) remains set at just 60 mg; and, more worryingly
still, research suggests that around a quarter of people in the
affluent western world, including America and the United Kingdom,
manage to consume only about 40 mg of vitamin C a day, just
2/3rds of this already very low RDA.
Despite repeated lectures from government and health agencies
to eat five portions of fruit and vegetables a day, it seems that
many people still do not do so. And even for those who do,
the amount of vitamin C yielded from these foods, grown as they
are on nutrient depleted soils, is likely to be low; and will be
depleted further by pesticides, transport, storage, processing
and cooking.
And as if this were not enough, vitamin C is used up easily
once in the body; both by combatting the free radicals released
by normal oxidative biochemical reactions and by the toxic
stresses produced by environmental pollution. The use of
alcohol, tobacco and other drugs, including common medications,
is also highly destructive of vitamin C.
Given all these factors, it’s hard to think many of us
are getting optimal levels of vitamin C, an observation
that’s strongly supported by a look at intakes in the animal
kingdom.
What particularly interested Pauling was that human being are
unusual, though not unique, amongst animals in that we are unable
to manufacture vitamin C within our bodies. Little in
nature is ever wasted, and Pauling argued, logically enough, that
animals which do manufacture their own vitamin C would only make
as much as their health demanded. It seems, however, that
most animals produce around 30 mg of vitamin C per kilo of body
weight, and this figure rises dramatically when the organism is
under particular stress. For an adult human weighing, say,
75kg (165 pounds), the figure of 30 mg would equate to a vitamin
C requirement of 2,250 mg, which of course must be obtained from
the daily diet or through supplements.
But in case this figure seems high, it is fortunately possible
to compare typical human intakes with those of closest genetic
relatives in the animal kingdom, the great apes, who are also
unable to synthesise vitamin C within their bodies. Interestingly,
the diets prepared for chimpanzees and gorillas in captivity,
presumably with their optimal health as the intention, seem
typically to yield between 20 and 30 mg of vitamin C per kilo of
the animals’ bodyweight. And a 1940s study of gorillas
in the wild estimated a vitamin C intake from their food of
around 4,500 mg, typically around 22.5 mg per kilo of the
animal’s bodyweight.
And of course, it needs to be remembered that these creatures
in the wild are likely to be subject to far less environmental
stress and fewer toxins than human beings, thereby making better
use of the larger amounts of vitamin C they consume, and further
emphasising the inadequacy of most human’s intakes.
In the face of all this evidence, given that humans are
estimated to be around 98% genetically identical to the great
apes, an intake of 1,000 – 2,000 mg a day for a typical
adult would not seem excessive; and the RDA, in fact, appears
pitifully low.
Happily, these optimal intakes of vitamin C
are easily achieved through supplementation, and there are no
known problems of toxicity at any level. But it is probably
best to stagger the intake of high doses through the day, to
maximise absorption and maintain saturation levels in blood and
tissue at all times.
January 2008
More about vitamin C and liquid vitamins and
minerals