Vitamin C: should we supplement?

Current opinion in critical care. 2018;24(4):248-255

Plain language summary

Vitamin C deficiency is frequently encountered in critically ill patients due to their increased needs and diminished intake. The aim of this review was to summarise the current role of Vitamin C in critically ill patients. The review discussed clinical and preclinical studies published in the past 5 years investigating repletion and pharmacological dosing of intravenous vitamin C as adjuvant therapy in trauma, ischemia/reperfusion injury (tissue damage caused when blood supply returns to tissue) and sepsis (the body's response to an infection). Results indicate that during critical illness, vitamin C has antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and immune-supporting effects. It also acts as a cofactor for certain enzymes. Authors conclude that vitamin C supplementation (repletion and/or pharmacological dose) is a promising potential adjuvant therapy for critical illnesses with increased oxidative stress.

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW Hypovitaminosis C and vitamin C deficiency are very common in critically ill patients due to increased needs and decreased intake. Because vitamin C has pleiotropic functions, deficiency can aggravate the severity of illness and hamper recovery. RECENT FINDINGS Vitamin C is a key circulating antioxidant with anti-inflammatory and immune-supporting effects, and a cofactor for important mono and dioxygenase enzymes. An increasing number of preclinical studies in trauma, ischemia/reperfusion, and sepsis models show that vitamin C administered at pharmacological doses attenuates oxidative stress and inflammation, and restores endothelial and organ function. Older studies showed less organ dysfunction when vitamin C was administered in repletion dose (2-3 g intravenous vitamin C/day). Recent small controlled studies using pharmacological doses (6-16 g/day) suggest that vitamin C reduces vasopressor support and organ dysfunction, and may even decrease mortality. SUMMARY A short course of intravenous vitamin C in pharmacological dose seems a promising, well tolerated, and cheap adjuvant therapy to modulate the overwhelming oxidative stress in severe sepsis, trauma, and reperfusion after ischemia. Large randomized controlled trials are necessary to provide more evidence before wide-scale implementation can be recommended.

Lifestyle medicine

Fundamental Clinical Imbalances : Immune and inflammation
Patient Centred Factors : Triggers/Vitamin C
Environmental Inputs : Diet ; Nutrients
Personal Lifestyle Factors : Nutrition
Functional Laboratory Testing : Not applicable
Bioactive Substances : Vitamin C

Methodological quality

Allocation concealment : Not applicable
Publication Type : Journal Article ; Review

Metadata

Nutrition Evidence keywords : Dehydroascorbic acid ; DHA ; Antioxidant ; Glucose ; Hypoglycaemia ; Insulin