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Vitamin
C 200 mg Coated Tablets, 60/bottle $5.00
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Each capsule contains:
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Directions:
Healthy adults may take one to three (1-3) tablets daily, with a glass of fluid (water, juice, milk, etc.).
What does the research say about Vitamin C?
Below are two articles we found by searching on the web.
From
link: http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/1996pres/960415c.html
Date: Monday, April 15, 1996
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Sharon Ricks or Jane DeMouy (301) 496-6110
200 MILLIGRAMS DAILY OF VITAMIN C IS APPROPRIATE
Two hundred
milligrams of vitamin C may be an appropriate daily amount for healthy men,
according to a new study by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The findings
are published in the April 16 Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
"Eating five fruits and vegetables a day will easily provide 200 mg," says principal investigator Dr. Mark Levine of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), a part of the NIH.
Seven healthy men aged 20 to 26 years old were hospitalized for 4 to 6 months and fed a vitamin C-restricted diet. Reducing the amount of stored vitamin C in the body ensured accurate measurements of absorption of the nutrient for daily doses ranging from 30 mg to 2,500 mg.
Among
Levine's findings: at 30 mg, six patients reported feeling tired and irritable.
At 200 mg, plasma had more than 80 percent maximal concentration of vitamin
C and tissues were completely saturated. Doses of 500 mg and higher
were completely excreted in urine. At 1,000 mg, some volunteers showed potential
adverse effects, such as high levels of oxalate and uric acid in the urine,
which might lead to kidney stones. "It's almost as if we are programmed
to have a certain amount of vitamin C and no more," says Levine.
The study is the first to measure levels of absorption, distribution and excretion of vitamin C for multiple doses in patients who are hospitalized, which ensures accurate dosage and control of diet. Such a rigorous study provides the kind of data needed to establish a Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA). The current RDA for vitamin C, which is determined by the Food and Nutrition Board of the National Research Council, is 60 mg. That value is based on the amount of vitamin C needed to prevent a person from getting scurvy and provide body stores for about 30 days, with a margin of safety.
"It's a great incentive for people to eat more fruits and vegetables," says Dr. Van Hubbard, director of NIDDK's Division of Nutrition Research Coordination. He explains that vitamin C contributes to healing wounds, maintenance of capillaries, bones and teeth, and absorption of iron. Citrus fruits, strawberries, and green vegetables such as broccoli are rich in vitamin C.
"There's another message here for doctors," Levine adds. "They should ask patients who complain of fatigue or irritability what they eat. If their diet is all fast food, they may be deficient in vitamin C. It's a good, cheap intervention to first try adding fruits and vegetables to the diet for a few weeks."
Levine is now studying ideal intake for women. When asked whether he takes supplements, Levine says, "I used to, but now I eat my fruits and vegetables."
Vitamin
C Protects Against Cataracts
But Smoking Decreases Body's Use of Antioxidants
by Jeannie Davies
Feb. 22, 2002 -- Break out the orange juice, the berries, the broccoli, bell peppers, and cabbage. Here's more evidence that Vitamin C -- from food and supplements -- protects your eyes from cataracts.
Researchers
from Boston's Tufts University studied data on 492 women aged
53 to 73, to see how nutrition affected their risk of getting cataracts. They
found a significant link between age and vitamin C intake for risk of cortical
cataracts, a very common form. For women younger than 60, a vitamin C intake
greater than 362 mg/day reduced risk of cataracts by 57% compared with those
who had an intake less than 140 mg/day. Those who took vitamin C supplements
for more than 10 years had 60% lower odds of cataracts than those who took
no supplements. "This is interesting because recommended dietary allowances
are considered to be significantly greater than the vitamin C intakes required
to prevent vitamin C deficiency-related disease," writes lead author
Allen Taylor, a researcher with the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging at Tufts. His study appears in the most recent issue of the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Researchers also looked at factors
related to having another type of cataract -- called posterior subcapsular
(PSC) opacities -- which involve the outermost layers of the lens of the eye.
They found that women who never smoked and who had high dietary intake of
carotenoids had fewer PSC cataracts. Smoking has been shown to decrease the
body's stores of antioxidants, writes Taylor. They saw no connection between
intake of antioxidants called lutein and zeaxanthin with risk of PSC cataracts
-- although some other studies have found a link. That issue needs further
investigation, says Taylor. Not all studies have shown that vitamin C has
this protective role, he writes. However, the benefit of long-term use of
supplements is consistent with what's known about cataract formation. Damage
to the eye's cortex --
causing opacity and cataracts -- occurs over an extended period of time, and
is caused by long-term build-up of proteins, he says. "These data add
more weight to the accumulating evidence that antioxidant nutrients can be
[used] to alter the rates of development of these major (but less studied)
forms of age-related opacities," Taylor writes. It also provides indirect
evidence that smoking negates all the benefits of antioxidants by preventing
the body from effectively using them.
Warning
Not recommended to persons with stomach ulcers. Keep out of reach of children.
DISCLAIMER:
This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
BATORY A.M., Inc. makes no claims whatsoever as to any benefits of this product
beyond its value as a dietary supplement.
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