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oapen-20.500.12657-753352023-08-11T02:38:02Z Chapter 11 Vitamin C and the Brain Hoffer, Leonard John Antioxidants, Ascorbic Acid, Infectious Disease, Intravenous Ascorbate, Vitamin C, acute sepsis, cancer treatment, infectious disease treatment, stem cell transplantation bic Book Industry Communication::M Medicine::MM Other branches of medicine::MMG Pharmacology bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences::PSD Molecular biology bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences The brain requires vitamin C to metabolize fuel substrates and synthesize neurotransmitters, regulate their release, and modify their actions. Vitamin C also protects the brain from oxidative damage. Clinical studies do not provide strong evidence that vitamin C deficiency directly impairs brain function but rather suggest that the fatigue, mood disturbance, and cognitive dysfunction sometimes associated with vitamin C deficiency are due to peripheral tissue damage, with possibly an exaggerated emotional response to it. Severe brain injury drastically depletes the cerebrospinal fluid of vitamin C; clinical trials of high-dose intravenous vitamin C are strongly warranted for this condition. The very limited clinical trial evidence available does not demonstrate that vitamin C supplementation slows the progression of dementia or improves clinical outcomes after an acute ischemic stroke. Hypovitaminosis C is common in people with severe mental illness; it should be treated. A few clinical trials have been carried out of low-pharmacologic doses of vitamin C (alone or with other nutrients) as adjunctive therapy in patients with chronic stable schizophrenia or depression, with inconsistent results. There is plausible but inclusive evidence that continuous supplementation with a combination of several micronutrients, including vitamin C, may have cognitive benefits in some people even if they lack diagnosed vitamin deficiencies. 2023-08-10T12:19:29Z 2023-08-10T12:19:29Z 2020 chapter 9781138337992 9781032175256 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/75335 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International 9780429442025_10.1201_9780429442025-11.pdf Taylor & Francis Vitamin C CRC Press 10.1201/9780429442025-11 10.1201/9780429442025-11 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb b5f7db67-fe9c-4e84-b587-54aa1b8117c0 a9bd203e-2329-457e-a93c-b053a8e62b88 9781138337992 9781032175256 CRC Press 27 Lotte and John Hecht Memorial Foundation Lotte & John Hecht Memorial Foundation open access
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The brain requires vitamin C to metabolize fuel substrates and synthesize neurotransmitters, regulate their release, and modify their actions. Vitamin C also protects the brain from oxidative damage. Clinical studies do not provide strong evidence that vitamin C deficiency directly impairs brain function but rather suggest that the fatigue, mood disturbance, and cognitive dysfunction sometimes associated with vitamin C deficiency are due to peripheral tissue damage, with possibly an exaggerated emotional response to it. Severe brain injury drastically depletes the cerebrospinal fluid of vitamin C; clinical trials of high-dose intravenous vitamin C are strongly warranted for this condition. The very limited clinical trial evidence available does not demonstrate that vitamin C supplementation slows the progression of dementia or improves clinical outcomes after an acute ischemic stroke. Hypovitaminosis C is common in people with severe mental illness; it should be treated. A few clinical trials have been carried out of low-pharmacologic doses of vitamin C (alone or with other nutrients) as adjunctive therapy in patients with chronic stable schizophrenia or depression, with inconsistent results. There is plausible but inclusive evidence that continuous supplementation with a combination of several micronutrients, including vitamin C, may have cognitive benefits in some people even if they lack diagnosed vitamin deficiencies.
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Taylor & Francis
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2023
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