Skip to main content

Home/ Dr. Goodyear/ Group items matching ""IV vitamin c"" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
Nathan Goodyear

Acute Hepatitis Treated with High Doses of Vitamin C - 0 views

  •  
    Old case study of IV vitamin C, not high dose, used to treat acute case of hepatitis C.
Nathan Goodyear

Study Finds High-dose Intravenous Vitamin C Reduces Pain and Inflammation in Those... -- WICHITA, Kan., Dec. 5, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- - 0 views

  •  
    High dose IV vitamin C shown to reduce both pain and inflammation in patients with RA.  This study looked at doses only up to 50 grams.  The specific inflammatory marker that this study looked at was CRP and it was reduced on average by 44%.
Nathan Goodyear

Effect of high dose vitamin C on Epstein-Barr viral infection - 0 views

  •  
    IV vitamin C shown to reduce EBV EA IgG and EBV VCA IgM using 7.5 grams to 50 gram infusions.  This protocol found that Magnesium reduced discomfort with the IVC therapy.
Nathan Goodyear

High-dose parenteral ascorbate enhanced chemosensitivity of ovarian cancer and reduced toxicity of chemotherapy. - PubMed - NCBI - 1 views

  •  
    Proof of conept finds IV vitamin C is synergistic with chemotherapy in ovarian cancer.  In addition, a reduction in toxic side effects were also seen.  Why is vitamin C not used???  The results were found in in vivo and in vitro study.
Nathan Goodyear

Effect of high-dose intravenous vitamin C on inflammation in cancer patients - 0 views

  •  
    IV vitamin C reduces inflammation in cancer patients, primarily measure through CRP. 
Nathan Goodyear

Pharmacologic doses of ascorbate act as a prooxidant and decrease growth of aggressive tumor xenografts in mice - 0 views

  •  
    high dose IV vitamin C shown to be treatment option in Cancer.  Granted in a mouse study, but high dose IV vitamin C shown to decrease growth rates of ovarian, pancreatic, and glioblastoma cancers.
Nathan Goodyear

Lipid peroxidation in hemodialysis patients: ef... [Clin Biochem. 2008] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  •  
    IV vitamin C shown to reduce AGE and lipid hydroperoxide levels post IV vitamin C when compared prior and controls.
Nathan Goodyear

Treatment of Postherpetic Neuralgia with Intravenous Administration of Vitamin C - 0 views

  •  
    IV vitamin C therapy found to be beneficial in aiding neuropathic pain from postherpetic neuralgia.
Nathan Goodyear

Researchers establish benefits of high-dose vitamin C for ovarian cancer patients - 0 views

  •  
    statement from KU on their new study on IV vitamin C in stage III and IV ovarian cancer.
Nathan Goodyear

Intravenous vitamin C administration improve... [In Vivo. 2011 Nov-Dec] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  •  
    IV vitamin C in women with breast CA in Germany found to benefit from less side effects and improved quality of life in those receiving chemo/radiation.  Again, IV vitamin C proven to be well tolerated in very ill individuals.
Nathan Goodyear

Autoschizis: another cell death for canc... [Ital J Anat Embryol. 2001] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  •  
    The autoschizis from IV vitamin C and K3 proposed to be secondary to oxidative stress.
Nathan Goodyear

In vivo reactivation of DNases in impla... [J Histochem Cytochem. 2001] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  •  
    IV vitamin C/K3 combination therapy reactivates DNase activity in mouse model of prostate cancer.
Nathan Goodyear

Non-toxic potentiation of cancer chemotherapy b... [Int J Cancer. 1987] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  •  
    IV vitamin C and K3 induces cancer cell death through production of H2O2 in catalase deficient cancer cells.  Pretreament shown to potentiate traditional chemotherapy.
Nathan Goodyear

Pharmacologic ascorbic acid concentrations selectively kill cancer cells: Action as a pro-drug to deliver hydrogen peroxide to tissues - PNAS - 0 views

  • Taken together, these data indicate that ascorbate at concentrations achieved only by i.v. administration may be a pro-drug for formation of H2O2, and that blood can be a delivery system of the pro-drug to tissues.
  • These findings give plausibility to i.v. ascorbic acid in cancer treatment, and have unexpected implications for treatment of infections where H2O2 may be beneficial
  • pharmacologic concentrations of ascorbate killed cancer but not normal cells, that cell death was dependent only on extracellular but not intracellular ascorbate, and that killing was dependent on extracellular hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) formation with ascorbate radical as an intermediate
  • ...48 more annotations...
  • Our data show that ascorbic acid selectively killed cancer but not normal cells, using concentrations that could only be achieved by i.v. administration
  • Ascorbate-mediated cell death was due to protein-dependent extracellular H2O2 generation, via ascorbate radical formation from ascorbate as the electron donor. Like glucose, when ascorbate is infused i.v., the resulting pharmacologic concentrations should distribute rapidly in the extracellular water space (42). We showed that such pharmacologic ascorbate concentrations in media, as a surrogate for extracellular fluid, generated ascorbate radical and H2O2. In contrast, the same pharmacologic ascorbate concentrations in whole blood generated little detectable ascorbate radical and no detectable H2O2. These findings can be accounted for by efficient and redundant H2O2 catabolic pathways in whole blood (e.g., catalase and glutathione peroxidase) relative to those in media or extracellular fluid
  • ascorbic acid administered i.v. in pharmacologic concentrations may serve as a pro-drug for H2O2 delivery to the extracellular milieu
  • H2O2 generated in blood is normally removed by catalase and glutathione peroxidase within red blood cells, with internal glutathione providing reducing equivalents
  • The electron source for glutathione is NADPH from the pentose shunt, via glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. If activity of this enzyme is diminished, the predicted outcome is impaired H2O2 removal causing intravascular hemolysis, the observed clinical finding.
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      The mechansism here is inadequate recycling of GSH due to lack of G6PD, build up of intracellular H2O2 and RBC lysis--hemolysis.
  • Only recently has it been understood that the discordant clinical findings can be explained by previously unrecognized fundamental pharmacokinetics properties of ascorbate
  • Intracellular transport of ascorbate is tightly controlled in relation to extracellular concentration
  • Intravenous ascorbate infusion is expected to drastically change extracellular but not intracellular concentrations
  • For i.v. ascorbate to be clinically useful in killing cancer cells, pharmacologic but not physiologic extracellular concentrations should be effective, independent of intracellular ascorbate concentrations.
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      accumulation of extracellular vitamin C is the effect.
  • It is unknown why ascorbate, via H2O2, killed some cancer cells but not normal cells.
  • There was no correlation with ascorbate-induced cell death and glutathione, catalase activity, or glutathione peroxidase activity.
  • H2O2, as the product of pharmacologic ascorbate concentrations, has potential therapeutic uses in addition to cancer treatment, especially in infections
  • Neutrophils generate H2O2 from superoxide,
  • i.v. ascorbate is effective in some viral infections
  • H2O2 is toxic to hepatitis C
  • Use of ascorbate as an H2O2-delivery system against sensitive pathogens, viral or bacterial, has substantial clinical implications that deserve rapid exploration.
  • Recent pharmacokinetics studies in men and women show that 10 g of ascorbate given i.v. is expected to produce plasma concentrations of nearly 6 mM, which are >25-fold higher than those concentrations from the same oral dose
  • As much as a 70-fold difference in plasma concentrations is expected between oral and i.v. administration,
  • Complementary and alternative medicine practitioners worldwide currently use ascorbate i.v. in some patients, in part because there is no apparent harm
  • Human Burkitt's lymphoma cells
  • We first investigated whether ascorbate in pharmacologic concentrations selectively affected the survival of cancer cells by studying nine cancer cell lines
  • Clinical pharmacokinetics analyses show that pharmacologic concentrations of plasma ascorbate, from 0.3 to 15 mM, are achievable only from i.v. administration
  • plasma ascorbate concentrations from maximum possible oral doses cannot exceed 0.22 mM because of limited intestinal absorption
  • For five of the nine cancer cell lines, ascorbate concentrations causing a 50% decrease in cell survival (EC50 values) were less than 5 mM, a concentration easily achievable from i.v. infusion
  • All tested normal cells were insensitive to 20 mM ascorbate.
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      meaning safe.
  • Lymphoma cells were selected because of their sensitivity to ascorbate
  • As ascorbate concentration increased, the pattern of death changed from apoptosis to pyknosis/necrosis, a pattern suggestive of H2O2-mediated cell death
  • Apoptosis occurred by 6 h after exposure, and cell death by pyknosis was ≈90% at 14 h after exposure
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      work continued beyond the IVC therapy itself
  • In contrast to lymphoma cells, there was little or no killing of normal lymphocytes and monocytes by ascorbate
  • Ascorbate is transported into cells as such by sodium-dependent transporters, whereas dehydroascorbic acid is transported into cells by glucose transporters and then immediately reduced internally to ascorbate
  • Whether or not intracellular ascorbate was preloaded, extracellular ascorbate induced the same amount and type of death.
  • extracellular ascorbate in pharmacologic concentrations mediates death of lymphoma cells by apoptosis and pyknosis/necrosis, independently of intracellular ascorbate.
  • H2O2 as the effector species mediating pharmacologic ascorbate-induced cell death
  • Superoxide dismutase was not protective
  • Because these data implicated H2O2 in cell killing, we added H2O2 to lymphoma cells and studied death patterns using nuclear staining (19, 28). The death patterns found with exogenous H2O2 exposure were similar to those found with ascorbate
  • For both ascorbate and H2O2, death changed from apoptosis to pyknosis/necrosis as concentrations increased
  • Sensitivity to direct exposure to H2O2 was greater in lymphoma cells compared with normal lymphocytes and normal monocytes
  • There was no association between the EC50 for ascorbate-mediated cell death and intracellular glutathione concentrations, catalase activity, or glutathione peroxidase activity
  • H2O2 generation was dependent on time, ascorbate concentration, and the presence of trace amounts of serum in media
  • ascorbate radical is a surrogate marker for H2O2 formation.
  • whatever H2O2 is generated should be removed by glutathione peroxidase and catalase within red blood cells, because H2O2 is membrane permeable
  • The data are consistent with the hypothesis that ascorbate in pharmacologic concentrations is a pro-drug for H2O2 generation in the extracellular milieu but not in blood.
  • The occurrence of one predicted complication, oxalate kidney stones, is controversial
  • In patients with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, i.v. ascorbate is contraindicated because it causes intravascular hemolysis
  • ascorbate at pharmacologic concentrations in blood is a pro-drug for H2O2 delivery to tissues.
  • ascorbate, an electron-donor in such reactions, ironically initiates pro-oxidant chemistry and H2O2 formation
  • data here showed that ascorbate initiated H2O2 formation extracellularly, but H2O2 targets could be either intracellular or extracellular, because H2O2 is membrane permeant
    • Nathan Goodyear
       
      the conversion of ascorbate to H2O2 occurs extracellular
  • More than 100 patients have been described, presumably without glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, who received 10 g or more of i.v. ascorbate with no reported adverse effects other than tumor lysis
  •  
    IV vitamin C benefits cancer patients
Nathan Goodyear

Intravenous Vitamin C and Cancer | GreenMedInfo | Blog Entry - 0 views

  •  
    Great read on the high dose IV vitamin C and its use in Cancer.  
Nathan Goodyear

JTM | Full text | Effect of high-dose intravenous vitamin C on inflammation in cancer patients - 0 views

  •  
    high dose IV vitamin C shown to reduce inflammatory and tumor markers in cancer patients.
Nathan Goodyear

PLoS ONE: Vitamin C: Intravenous Use by Complementary and Alternative Medicine Practitioners and Adverse Effects - 0 views

  • high dose intravenous vitamin C appears to be remarkably safe
  •  
    IV vitamin C therapy is a safe delivery route for high dose vitamin C
Nathan Goodyear

Ascorbic acid: Chemistry, biology and the treatment of cancer - 0 views

  •  
    IV vitamin C as an adjuvant in the treatment of cancer.
Nathan Goodyear

Clinical and experimental experiences with intravenous vitamin C - 0 views

  •  
    Nice review of the cytotoxicity of malignant cells with IV vitamin C.
« First ‹ Previous 41 - 60 of 283 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page