Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 Life Extension What's Hot Vitamin C treats neurologic condition The April 2004 issue of the journal Nature Medicine published an article by French researchers who discussed the finding that vitamin C could help alleviate the symptoms of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT), the most common inherited peripheral neuropathy, which affects one out of every 25,000 individuals. Approximately half of CMT patients have the CMT-1A form which is characterized by abnormal peripheral nerve myelination, leading to nerve damage and muscle atrophy. Michel Fontés and colleagues used a mouse model of the disease to determine the effects of ascorbic acid, which has been shown to be necessary for the promotion of myelination in vitro and, when deficient, has been linked with femoral neuropathies. In a series of experiments, the mice were fed the equivalent of approximately four grams ascorbic acid for a 70 kilogram adult male, which approaches the maximal amount approved for ascorbic acid deficiency treatment, or a placebo. The researchers found substantial improvements in movement in the mice treated with vitamin C after three months. The males were treated with the vitamin until their natural deaths. Males of this genetic strain who received placebos or no treatment lived an average of six months compared to male mice who received ascorbic acid who survived an average of 19.7 months, which approaches the lifespan of normal mice. When the sciatic nerves of the experimental mice were examined, ascorbic acid was found to be associated with remyelination , demonstrating nerve repair. A further finding was that the gene that is overexpressed in CMT-1A was inhibited by ascorbic acid to a level below that which is necessary to induce the disease's effects in the body. The authors propose that the effects of ascorbic acid are due not only to its antioxidant properties, but to a direct control of specific gene expression. They plan to initiate future trials in humans. -D Dye Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2004 Report Share Posted March 26, 2004 , in rereading this, look what it says about how many people are affected by CMT: 1 out of 25000 - it should be 1 out of 2500 or 1 out of 2000. The original abstract and paper in Nature Medicine says 1 out of 2500, so this 1 out of 25000 is most likely a typographical error - but quite a big one at that - I'd say one that puts us into rare disease category for sure. ~ G > Vitamin C treats neurologic condition > alleviate the symptoms of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT), the most common inherited > peripheral neuropathy, which affects one out of every 25,000 > individuals. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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