Maybe, but where is the actual research justifying your high intakes then? [....] are automatically denounced as a conspiracy of the medical-pharmaceutical-media complex.
What research supports my contention that people should take 4,000 mg vit C/day? Read Pauling's 1986 "How to Live Longer and Feel Better" and Stone's 1972 "The Healing Factor: Vitamin C against Disease" (online:
http://www.vitamincf...tion.org/stone/ ). Then use common sense. The following numbers are adjust for 70 kg body weight: primates recommend dose is over 2 g/d. Guinea pigs suggested dosage is about 2 g/d. If you ate a wide variety of
raw, fresh fruits and vegetables to get 2500 cals/day, you would get 2.3 g/day of vitamin C (Pauling p81), if you are the average of all other mammals on planet earth, you sacrifice 1.7% of your daily glucose calories to generate 10 g/day. By having an advanced vitamin-C conservation system, we gained a large evolutionary advantage by not sacrificing this 1.7 % of our food calories, as long as we ate a lot of raw, fresh, low-sugar fruits and vegetables.
The above observations provied a very powerful "theoretical argument". To me, it as good as an ideal study that would follow 30,000 people for 70 years on 200 mg/d, 1,000 mg/d and 4,000 mg/day. But what we have are large studies using at most 1 g/day for 10 years, and a bunch piddling studies at 200 mg/day. You can think a lot about complex and mostly useless studies, but they will never compare to the observations above.
> 1.5 g/day reduces
kidney stones by 50%. 10 g/d provides much better
pregnancy outcomes (my 2 g/day wife: 10.7 pound baby, 22.2 inches, natural birth, with a lot of work but not much pain) She's 5'8" and I'm 5'9". Lots of tissue requires lots of vitamin C. 10 g/d tripled the life expectancy (for example 18 months instead of 6 months) of
terminal cancer patients who did not undergo chemo (Pauling/Cameron work that has been questioned). I.V. doses reversing cancer (recent N.I.H. comments). 200 mg/day did
not help hayfever. 500 mg did
not help
asthma. 1 g/d helped 50% hayfever. 2.25 g/day helped 75%. Personally, I pretty much never breathed through my nose from
hayfever nearly year-round until I started > 4 mg/d. Hayfever is much worse during a child's
growing spurt because they are low on vit C from generating too much new tissue. You can't imagine how much suffering could have been alleviated if this 1979 study had been promoted. 1 g reduces insulin needs by 10 units, making 10 g/d enough to get at least 50% of
diabetic patients off insulin. Patients with
cholesterol 350 mg/dL took 3 g/d vit C and showed a 20% reduction in cholesterol. 10 g/d spread out would have shown more. People with cholesterol 260 mg/dL showed a 10% reduction on 3 g/d. 50% fewer
heart attacks in men in the largest study for those getting over 1 g/day. Most of this is just from glancing at Pauling's 1986 book. Much more can be found in Stone and not all of Klenner is excessive. Do you have references that can contradict any of this? (besides the cancer, I'm skeptical of that unless it's I.V.). Notice I didn't mention colds. That's because my experience is that it doesn't work as well as zicam, echinacea, and vit D, but maybe that is because I already take a lot of C and there's not much room for benefit. 4 g dose greatly reversing
heat stress on several occasions on my 60 yr old mother. 4 g dose often making me
feel better and think more clearly, which does not occur as strongly with 2 g dose.
It isn't impressive that I know a lot about vitamin C. What's impressive is that others don't know. Most of this information was in Stone's 1972 book, based on research that is 40 to 60 years old. To see how ignorant and misguided today's research is, it's a good place to start.
OK, on you other point, conspiracy theories. I do not call seeking profit by all legal means necessary a "conspiracy". Influencing the government to the detriment of citizens is perfectly legal. I only call it unethical when a research group at a University makes sure not to publish anything that would risk government/pharmaceutical funding. A researcher may also sacrifice common-sense ways of setting up a study in an attempt to contradict popular previously-held beliefs, knowing that the results will be meaningless to the big picture, but also knowing that it could make big headlines that your department head will love.
Imagine setting up a study to test a cold remedy but requiring 3 out of 5 symptoms to be present before treatment begins (cough, headache, sneezing, sore throat, fever). Is the cold not already fully involved and not likely to respond to any immune-enhancing compound? Then you leave out of the press release that there was a 50% reduction in subsequent colds in the treated group. Or let's say you take pictures of cartilage in a low dose and high dose group, choosing the pictures that will best support your abstract conclusion, knowing that what you're saying in the abstract and press release as "beneficial to joints" is what killed 20% of the subjects. Or let's say you see that a 1,000 mg Vit C dose has 4 times more vitamin C in the blood 6 hours later than the "steady-state" 24 hours later, but your conclusions is that no one can benefit from more than 200 mg/day because 200 mg result in the same levels at 24 hours. These are just the ones that made big headlines that I looked into enough to get the full paper. The tricks, conscious and unconcious, that are used to draw surprising and media-worthy conclusions should not be underestimated.
Any research paper that is accompanied by a press release from the university or government institution,
should make your warning bells go off. The purpose of the press release from the public relations departments of these institutions is to communicate what they think are news-worthy items. I suspect the purpose of the PR departments is to raise public image of the institution. I also suspect that researches that are able to feed something good to PR departments are somehow credited. So there's the completely legal "conspiracy" I allege.
Edited by zawy, 22 May 2009 - 02:52 PM.