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Tue, 12 Apr 2005 21:03:41 +0000

 

" Sepp Hasslberger " <sepp

 

 

 

Fwd: Vitamin C may be a life-saver

 

For information...

 

Kind regards

Sepp

 

 

<http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/story.jsp?story=628538>http://n\

ews.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/story.jsp?story=628538

 

 

Vitamin C may be a life-saver

Mega-doses of Vitamin C can counter avian flu, hepatitis and herpes,

and can even control the advance of Aids

By Jane Feinmann

 

12 April 2005

 

Imagine that a deadly virus is sweeping the world, killing and

maiming hundreds of thousands of children. Nothing seems able to stop

it - until a doctor stands up at the American Medical Association and

reports on 60 cases involving severely infected children, all of whom

have been cured. Yet his work, subsequently reported in a peer-review

journal, is ignored, leaving the virus to wreak havoc for decades.

 

This isn't a docudrama about some futuristic plague - it's a true

story about what happened in June 1949 when polio was at its peak. Dr

Frederick Klenner, a clinical researcher from Reidsville, North

Carolina, reported that a massive intravenous dose of Vitamin C - up

to 20,000mg daily for three days (today's recommended daily allowance

is 60mg) - had cured 60 of his patients. The findings were published

in a medical journal, yet there was virtually no interest. Apart from

a couple of minor trials, no attempt was made to find out if they had

any scientific substance.

 

Relating this curious incident in a new book, Vitamin C, Infectious

Diseases & Toxins: Curing the Incurable, Dr Thomas Levy, a US

cardiologist, admits to being gripped by a range of emotions when he

came across Klenner's work and other studies that replicated it. " To

know that polio had been easily cured yet so many people continued to

die, or survived to be permanently crippled by it, was difficult to

accept. "

 

Levy argues that the medical profession has routinely ignored

research showing that high doses of Vitamin C can combat bacteria,

toxins and severe viral infections including avian flu, SARS,

hepatitis and herpes. And this is not a case of doctors sniffing at

anecdotal evidence from a handful of enthusiasts. " Vitamin C is

possibly the best-researched substance in the world. There are more

than 24,000 papers and articles on the authoritative clinical

website, Medline. Yet virtually the all the evidence has been

dismissed. " Levy even claims that Aids can be controlled if a high

enough dosage of Vitamin C is maintained.

 

This is not the first time doctors have had their cages rattled over

the benefits of Vitamin C. The controversy has been simmering since

1753, when just a couple of sucks of a lime were shown to prevent

scurvy. In the 1950s the chemist Linus Pauling, a double Nobel

prize-winner, promoted the use of mega-doses of Vitamin C, but his

research was rubbished by clinicians.

 

Recently, the anti-Vitamin C sentiment has grown. It has been blamed

for causing the formation of kidney stones, and a study published in

the journal Science in 2001 found that even 200mg doses of Vitamin C

" facilitated the production of DNA-damaging agents associated with a

variety of cancers " . This finding was widely interpreted as proving

that Vitamin C causes cancer.

 

Britain's Food Standards Agency recommends taking a maximum of

1,000mg of Vitamin C a day. But a directive going through the

European Parliament aims to reduce this to less than 100mg in an

attempt to harmonise dosages across the Continent. Despite being

dubbed " illegal " by the advocate general of the European Court of

Justice last week, the directive could still be passed.

 

The controversy has not put off consumers, many of whom take Vitamin

C to ward off colds. The 1,000 mg capsule is the most popular single

vitamin in Britain, with the 500mg version second.

 

Some people argue that we can get sufficient Vitamin C from a diet

rich in fruit and vegetables, but Levy disagrees. The problem, he

says, is that a genetic design fault makes us unable to synthesise

our own Vitamin C. Levy claims that while recommended daily

allowances of 60mg are enough to prevent the development of scurvy in

otherwise healthy people, much higher levels are required to maintain

health when an infection strikes. At such times, the body begins to

" metabolise unusually large amounts of vitamin C, keeping stores so

depleted that the recommended daily allowance will not even prevent

many of the symptoms of scurvy from developing " .

 

Levy claims that the reason why most animals stay healthy throughout

their lives, while humans spend years coping with one or more chronic

diseases, is that animals make their own Vitamin C. The wild goat,

for instance, makes around 13,000mg a day, rising to 100,000mg when

faced with life-threatening infectious or toxic stress, according to

a 1961 study published in the Annals of the New York Academy of

Sciences.

 

So, is Levy right? Should everyone be taking mega-doses every day and

having intravenous infusions when they fall ill? Possibly.

 

Dr Rodney Adeniyi-Jones regularly gives 20,000mg doses to people with

arterial disease and as part of a flu treatment protocol, describing

its effects as " beneficial... but not miraculous " . And Professor

George Lewith of the Centre for Complementary and Integrated Medicine

says that while Vitamin C is not a panacea, it does have clinical

benefits depending on the dosage. " There may be doses that are

therapeutic, while another dose may be damaging for the same

condition. It is not a dose-response curve as with pharmaceuticals,

and we need to be cautious until this is better understood. "

 

But he also warns that: " Many of the [Vitamin C] trials have been

badly done and what evidence exists is mixed. Both those in favour

and against high doses frequently misinterpret the data. "

 

Levy may well be seen to have an axe to grind, yet the evidence seems

to support his view that apart from causing diarrhoea, mega-doses of

Vitamin C are not toxic. He says that a series of studies published

in leading journals have shown that, far from causing cancer, Vitamin

C is a safe supplement for chronic cancer patients. Further large

studies suggest that supplements do not put a normal person at

greater risk of developing kidney stones.

 

According to Levy, the problem is not that people might take too

much, but that they won't take enough - and thus won't get the

desired effects. " There's a popular medical view that taking Vitamin

C just makes expensive urine. Some of it is lost in urine, but the

more you consume, the more stays in your body. "

 

With a new book on the way claiming that Vitamin C deficiency is also

a primary cause of cardiovascular disease, Levy cannot be accused of

underselling his case. Nor can he overcome the fact that proper

clinical trials are still desperately needed. Considering its overall

safety, there appears to be no good reason why anyone with a chronic

or acute health problem should not try, at the very least, a couple

of week's regime of two or three 1,000mg tablets of Vitamin C a day.

 

Need to Know: So how much should you take?

 

* For a cold

 

Three 1,000mg doses a day, according to the campaign group Consumers

for Health Choice.

 

* For flu

 

Although it's more serious, the viral load is similar, according to

research, and taking up to 20,000mg a day could be beneficial.

 

* For shingles

 

Research has shown that this painful post-viral condition can be

pretty well cured by an injection of 3,000mg of vitamin C. Taking

four 1,000mg tablets orally for three days could be worthwhile as

well.

 

* For a hangover

 

Taking 1,000mg daily in the week before a booze-up reduces stress on

the liver. If you're drunk and want to look sober, a large dose of

vitamin C will prevent drunken behaviour, according to a 1986 study,

" Alcohol and Alcoholism " .

 

* To maintain your health

 

A 1,000mg daily dose is regarded as safe by the Food Standards

Agency, and adequate to keep sufficient vitamin C in the plasma and

tissues. " We believe this is absolutely safe and definitely

beneficial to people's health, " says Sue Croft of Consumers for

Health Choice.

 

 

 

 

 

--

 

 

The individual is supreme and finds its way through intuition.

 

Sepp Hasslberger

 

 

My page on physics, new energy, economy: http://www.hasslberger.com/

 

Critical perspective on Health: http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/sepp/

 

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Not satisfied with news from the tube and other controlled media?

Search the net! There are thousands of information sources

out there. Start with

 

http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/

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http://www.rexresearch.com/

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