Vitamin C1-Ascorbic Acid
Ascorbic Acid, or
Vitamin C, is water-soluble and it is an antioxidant vitamin.
Therefore, ascorbic Acid dissolves in water and cannot be
stored in the body, which means you need a continuous source
of Ascorbic Acid in your diet. Ascorbic Acid is used throughout
the body in forming collagen (a protein in bones, muscle,
blood vessels, and cartilage). Ascorbic Acid also helps the
body absorb iron and aids in the maintenance of bones and
teeth. Ascorbic Acid is absolutely essential for normal growth,
development, and health.
Ascorbic acid is a well-known
vitamin that is thought to be essential for the maintenance
of connective tissues. Without ascorbic acid, the structure
of the connective tissue becomes weakened, the linings of
blood vessels, as well as the sheath of connective tissue
about them, become weakened so that bleeding occurs. It is
involved in the hydroxylation of proline to hydroxyproline,
an important step in the synthesis of collagen, healthy bones
and cartilage. Thus, it is integral to the promotion of healthy
eyes, gums and teeth, critically essential in the healing
and repair of wounds and damaged cells.
It is also involved in the
hydroxylation of tryptophan to 5-HTP, the immediate precursor
to serotonin, and the conversion of 3,4-dihdrooxyphenylethylamine
to norepinephrine, and the hydroxylation of p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate
to homogentisic acid in the catabolic pathway of tyrosine.
Vitamin C and its esters have been shown to lower cholesterol
levels in atherosclerotic patients, and is involved in the
formation of hemoglobin, the absorption of iron from the body.
Tissues which have the highest rate of metabolic activity
also have the highest amounts of vitamin C.
Useful in complementing the
body's immune system in times of stress and illness as well
as necessary in maintaining optimum health.Vitamin C, when
used in conjunction with bioflavonoids, is thought to help
in the reduction of the formation of "age-spots."
Vitamin C may aid the body in stopping the skin's pigment
from prematurely clumping and being acted upon by the sun's
ultraviolet rays, circumventing the possibility of the clumps
from being turned into age-spots. Vitamin C is thought to
aid the body, strengthen capillaries and avoid easy bruising,
and the formation of those tiny hemorrhages of capillaries
that become spider veins. As a cofactor, Vitamin C also helps
the oil-secreting glands function properly, keeping the skin
from drying out. Further, this vitamin may also be helpful
in keeping hair from getting tangled, matted, snarled and
broken. There are 6 stable esters of vitamin C, all of which
prove useful in the body. These include: Vitamin C1-Ascorbic
Acid, VItamin C2-Dehyroascorbic Acid, Vitamin C3-Ascorbyl
Palmitate, VItamin C4-Calcium Ascorbate, Vitamin C5-Isoascorbic
Acid, Vitamin C6-Calcium Isoascorbate, and lastly, Ascorbign,
or provitamin C (the direct precursor of ascorbic acid) is
also useful and appears to potentiate, if not accelerate,
vitamin C activity.
Vitamin C1-Ascorbic Acid is an ingredient in the following product(s):
|