The American journal of clinical nutrition | 2021

Vitamin C and scar strength: analysis of a historical trial and implications for collagen-related pathologies.

 
 

Abstract


A double-blind controlled trial initiated in 1944 has led to the common narrative that a 10-mg daily vitamin C intake is adequate to prevent and treat impaired wound healing, and by inference, other collagen-related diseases such as heart disease or stroke. The WHO relies on this narrative to set the recommended nutrient intake for vitamin C. This narrative, however, is based on what is known as the eyeball method of data assessment. The 1944 trial published individual participant data on scar strength providing an opportunity to statistically probe the validity of the 10-mg narrative, something which has not yet been done. The findings show that a vitamin C intake that averages to 10\xa0mg/d over a mean follow-up of 11.5 mo was associated with a 42% weakened scar strength when compared with 80\xa0mg vitamin C intake/d (P\xa0<\xa00.001). The observed dose-response curve between scar strength and vitamin C intake suggests that the daily vitamin C intake needed to prevent collagen-related pathologies is in the range recommended by the National Academy of Medicine and the European Food Safety Authority (75 to 110\xa0mg/d), not the WHO recommendation (45\xa0mg/d). The findings also show that a vitamin C intake that averages to 65\xa0mg/d over a mean follow-up of 6.5 mo failed to restore the normal wound-healing capacity of vitamin C-depleted tissues; such tissues had a 49% weaker scar strength when compared with nondepleted tissues (P\xa0<\xa00.05). Thus, average daily vitamin C intakes ∼50% higher than the WHO recommends may fail to treat existing collagen-related pathologies. It is concluded that the prior lack of statistical analyses of a landmark trial may have led to a misleading narrative on the vitamin C needs for the prevention and treatment of collagen-related pathologies.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1093/ajcn/nqab262
Language English
Journal The American journal of clinical nutrition

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