We are gradually dying of so many things there is limitless horizon for profit from our despair. While causes seem many, there is a primary underlying cause. A few species including man, became enzyme-deficient so their bodies can no longer create ascorbic from glucose. Ascorbic in sufficient dose-duration-context addresses nearly all of man's health issues. The illness-industries have "carefully looked away" for nearly a century. Put N=1 research into your own hands!
Showing posts with label liposomal vitamin C. Show all posts
Showing posts with label liposomal vitamin C. Show all posts

November 26, 2013

Vitamin C - Liposomal and More - A Casual Intro to a Critical Substance

They say you can't miss something you've never had. Turns out that is not true, at least for ascorbic generated by the human body. We all miss it profoundly, without knowing it. Every day of our less-robust, shorter-lived, injury-damaged and illness- and disease- prone lives.

The human body would be creating substantial amounts of ascorbic but for a species-wide gene mutation that prevents it. We used to. Nearly every other creature in existence does. Loosely, the science theory goes that way back in time, when humans were already humans but not yet the latest version we know and love, a retrovirus affected human bodies in precisely the right way to wipe out our ability to self-create one of the most profoundly powerful enzymes in our bodies, the one most responsible for "defense" (and many other things).

Conveniently, it's not that we die outright without it -- except for Scurvy, the "last-collapse" indicator of being without it, but that trivial amount can be gotten through food and generally is. It's just that we probably develop more slowly and less ideally (less intelligence), end sooner (less life span), and we certainly die more frequently and easily (-- and more en masse in epidemics) for lack of it.

Lack of decent quantity of ascorbic in the body is what makes us vulnerable, fragile little fleshpods.

Sufficient ascorbic is what prevents, let alone stalls or cures, nearly everything known to man:
  • Viral infections.
  • Bacterial infections.
  • Fungal infections.
  • Protozoan infections.
  • Parasitical infections.
  • Poisonous creature bites and stings.
  • Poisonous foods ingestion.
  • Toxic metals and halides ingestion.
  • Toxic drugs ingestion.
  • Radiation exposure.
  • Severe shock from assaults both physical and psychological.
  • And most of the endless "diseases of modern culture" we know today.
This is not just a "take your vitamins" or "oh just eat right and you don't need vitamins" substance. Ascorbic being classified as a vitamin early on (actually even before they had discovered it, they had decided that the thing-that-stopped-scurvy was a nutrient) rather than recognized for its profound body-wide importance and deserved "innate" role, is the worst thing that ever happened to our people.

Only a few very rare creatures don't create this internally anymore. The higher primate group that includes man; guinea pigs, a fruit bat, and a couple even more obscure birds. All those were believed to be living in tropical-ish, high-ascorbic-in-food-source areas when their ability to create it internally went away, which is apparently why they survived. Maybe not as ideally as possible, but at least they kept breathing and reproducing.

Ascorbic is better compared to a powerful hormone than the way we think of vitamins. A defensive, life-saving substance, responsible for everything from keeping us from getting a cold or disease to begin with, to healing us when bit by a snake or burned or beat up, to aging us far more gracefully, to protecting, rescuing, defending and regenerating many other critical substances in the body as well.

Ascorbic's handling of assaults to the human body come in three categories:
  • Those it is known to cure in sufficient dose-duration-context, because it was studied.
  • Those it is known to reverse or pause, in at least sufficient dose-duration-context for that much, because studying it for cure or in greater dose-duration-application hasn't yet been done.
  • Those it is not known to be helpful to, because nobody has actually studied it.
You notice I don't list an option for things it's been studied "with sufficient dose-duration-context" involved but which it does not help. That's because there isn't anything in that category yet. That's how bloody important this substance is.

Electron communication is life

C is what keeps the body from becoming a swamp of antisocial sluggish electrons, and keeps it in -- or restores it to -- a lively interactive community.  See Szent-Gyorgyi and the Dragon for some talk about the first and primary function of ascorbic in the body, which if you really wrap your brain around it (good luck with that), is mind-blowing. Is the key to life, literally.

S-G won a Nobel Prize for figuring that out about the body, and ascorbic turns out to be something that makes it happen. He won that prize nearly a century ago. People often say that science hasn't caught up with what we need for health, but really, it's just that most scientists, let alone media and lay people, have not caught up with science.

When ascorbic was discovered there were already existing mental-models (paradigms) about it in science, and initially it was very expensive, so experimenting at all, let alone in truly decent dosages, wasn't so easy. By the time a lab-made version was affordable for experimentation, not only were preconceived ideas in place (e.g. experiments used only enough to 'stop scurvy,' as opposed to using enough to cure much else), but competition from vaccination and treatment pharmaceuticals was already affecting "how" people went about research, when they were paid to do it at all, what could get published and where, and how much attention was paid to such published research even then.

For example, looking for a vaccination for Diptheria was a big focus back around that time. They had a hard time experimenting on animals for this because they couldn't give it to the animals. They could dose them with it but they'd just shake it off. Turns out, that's because the animals could all create ascorbic internally! When it turned out the guinea pig, like man, did not create ascorbic internally, finally animal experimentation on many things could be done, without that pesky natural powerhouse fighter-chemical interfering. That's when guinea pigs became the famous lab animal. They were far less ideal in other ways than rats and mice, but they shared that unique (if tragic) trait with humans of no longer being able to endogenously create ascorbic.

That could have been the clue that changed the world of human health. Alas, at that point, few people with power and money in that field wanted to find and declare ascorbic the answer to preventing let alone curing diptheria and more: they were looking for a 'drug' as a vaccine or treatment that could make money. That approach continued and cemented the approach to health as a profitable illness-treatment (rather than an affordable preventative effort) from then on, alas.

Ascorbic's Range and the Bowel-Tolerance Effect

So the first and important thing to understand is that the human body was originally designed to create ascorbic internally, which means the mass quantities of it that are 'normal' amounts we should be getting, wouldn't have gone through the bowel, the way it must now, if we ingest it instead.

The osmotic nature of ascorbic as a molecule means it pulls water through (into) your intestines/colon. There are other molecules with this nature, such as magnesium. This is why more than a fairly small amount (a few grams, depending on the state of your body) of ascorbic will give you a watery stool.

Regular diarrhea is not caused by this. That is caused, or so explained a medical friend of mine once, by the body considering its digestive contents toxic, and instead of dumping the fluid part of the broken-down food/liquids over to the renal system to be absorbed for its nutrients and the rest excreted, it instead dumps the entirety of what it's got into the bowel to flush at great speed to be excreted. In that case, liquid stool is a result of the body "protecting" itself from toxins -- in other words, flatly refusing to even try digesting that crap you ate. Which can be how it interprets everything, when you get certain infections in your digestive system for example, which when mixed up with even ordinary food or intestine contents leads to the body interpreting it as the same result.

"Osmotic" watery stool that is caused by ascorbic or magnesium for example, are actually a different cause, though a similar (not identical, if you're paying attention to the experience, actually) result. That is simply a matter of the molecules attracting water.  The body is not flushing it because "it was extra and not needed" or "bad" (a common misperception). The fluid in the intestines/colon happens simply because the body does not absorb it fast enough (well enough) from that location. The nature of the molecule pulls water through and into the intestines "as it sits there." The more of it there, and the longer it's there, the more fluid.

So it's a time and quantity issue. The speed of body-absorption versus the speed for its drawing in water.

This is the reason for what they call "bowel tolerance," meaning, "how much ascorbic you can take orally before it interferes with your bathroom habits."
  • That limit does not apply the same way to ascorbate taken intravenously. This is vented mostly through the renal system (kidneys and bladder).
  • That limit is larger if the ascorbic is a buffered ascorbate, which is absorbed more quickly, and due to competition with the osmotic effect that also means more completely.
  • If you take the ascorbic orally but in smaller doses (if you were to take ten [10] grams through the day in 10 doses of 1g, instead of in one dose of 10g), you will be able to absorb much more of it (often twice or more the amount) before any bowel effects.
So if you get a 'bowel flush' it isn't that your body didn't want it, it's just that our bodies weren't designed to get massive quantities of it through the digestive system. It doesn't handle it well there.

On the way between going in your mouth and out your bottom, whatever time the ascorbic has to absorb into you as it 'passes through' -- this includes going into some of your lymph fluids and blood stream, not just your intestines, because your intestines interface with those -- it will be used by the body to "deal with" whatever is present right-then, right-there.

For example, if you are fighting off the flu, it will get 'used up' at great speed even as it is going through you. By the time it hits your intestines there may be nothing left of it! In that case, you can take lots of ascorbic and get no bowel effect at all. The more your body is dealing with in the digestive/ blood/ lymph areas at that moment, the more you can take without any bowel result.

Klenner and Cathcart did a lot of study in this area, which now gives us some idea of how much dosage we're looking at a person needing depending on what they are faced with. See the post Ascorbic Bowel Tolerance and Absorption for more on that, or this summary image about Vitamin C tolerance.

So what then?

Once mankind started to figure out how profoundly powerful and important ascorbic was (although only a small number of people were listening, despite that much of this not only had research, but published and even peer reviewed research), and once we figured out that our bodies used to make it, and should make it, and need to make it, and that nearly every other creature in the world makes it; we were still stuck with the unfortunate present-day reality:

The amount of ascorbic we ought to be getting even on a good day, if our bodies created it (theories range from a minimum of about 3g a day, to probably more like a dozen, and that's for a 'good' day) -- never mind on a day filled with stress, environmental toxins, food toxins, exposure to contagious germs, possibly injuries etc. -- is nearly impossible to get into our body by putting it down our throat.

All eating the stuff really did was get a little bit into the body -- like 10%, maybe 20% buffered -- and the rest just pulled in enough water to make us have to stay near a toilet if we took much of it.

(As a comparative example, animal nutrition guidelines allot monkeys over 50 times the (comparative) ascorbic that the US RDA says humans need. Guinea Pigs, 40 to over 160 times more. Critics say this is because humans are the only one of those species that has to pay for health care. The more ascorbic we get regularly, likely the far less 'care' we would need.)

It was also not as effective. For example, one researcher (Klenner) with a daughter back in the days when smallpox-style disease was rampant, didn't want to stick a needle in his very little girl. He gave her 24 grams orally over the course of a day and it had no effect, or rather, if it had an effect it was merely in keeping the situation about like it had been a day before, rather than getting worse (which probably was really something, actually). Scared because this was virulent, fast and deadly, he gave her 1g of ascorbic -- just one single gram! -- as an injection intravenously. She immediately started improving, radically. IV dose is said to reach "the tissues" in a greater, and stronger-initial-spike than any amount you could take orally.

So, some of this is about the overall amount you can absorb, but some is also about the "wave" or "peak" amount you can absorb in a sudden "whack!" against the bad-stuff your body may be fighting.

So even if we could get a good dose down us orally, over the course of a day, it still might not be nearly as effective as even a fraction as much if absorbed more-suddenly and a bit more closely to how the body was designed to get it (internally) in the first place.

Intravenous C

You can supply ascorbate intravenously. It does not fully absorb that way either, there is a good loss through the renal system, but vastly more of it absorbs than taking it orally. Plus, through an IV, it can be both a constant dosage, and a very high-peak dosage as well.

When researchers and hands-on doctors worked with ascorbic via IV, with sufficient dosage-duration-context, the results on health went into miraculous, actually curing or at least stalling nearly everything which is allegedly incurable. But those things generally didn't and wouldn't happen without IV high dosage of C.

"Miraculous" is probably an inappropriate word to use for ascorbic results because most the conditions they were treating with it would never have developed in the first place if the body were creating it internally. It is the primary thing the body uses for defense from every kind of threat. So it is no surprise that if we actually get enough of the stuff, for long enough, and in the right context, that the body "responds well" and curatively to it. We were made for it, or it for us.

By context I mean that sometimes, by the time we're taking it for virulent illness or injury, other substances -- yes, even medicines -- are best combined with it, because it's often a lot more work to defeat something which has already nearly killed you, than to defeat it before it has a foothold.

Also by context I mean that at very high quantities, like anything else you ingest in major dose, the more you take of one thing "comparative" to everything else, sometimes the more other-issues you can cause just by that imbalance. In the case of C, it needs fluids and minerals added to the body in particular, as both will be vented by lots of it, so you need to add those to your body along with the C if you are using high dosages. But ideally, the body would get the full spectrum of nutrition -- other vitamins, minerals, aminos, lipids -- as support.

So the body responds well and with healing-reflex to ascorbic in sufficient dosage and duration and context because it's the substance the body was designed to use for exactly these purposes. That isn't so much miraculous as just a no-brainer "of course."

But you can't go to the drugstore and buy a dose of ascorbate in saline complete with needle and dose yourself. It's difficult to come by, so for IV-based ascorbate treatment, one has to visit a doctor.

Doctors who use vitamins, minerals, aminos and herbs for treatment instead of or in addition to pharmaceutical drugs, are said to be using "orthomolecular" treatment.

Allopathic (standard) doctors will generally not only not use simple, nontoxic things like vitamins as treatment, but they will often fight against even allowing it, even when the person is already proclaimed dying-any-time-now so there's nothing to lose, like in this example, which is only one of many.

So if you needed ascorbic, you could use an IV for high dosage. It first means "find a rare kind of doctor who is willing to use natural substances, like the kind your body should be producing itself." They may not be near you. Even if their office is in town, "visit a doctor" may still limit the dosage to a few times a week. That is better, but still not ideal at all, and most people can't find one period, or not without a lot of expensive and inconvenient travel. And then the treatment itself costs a small fortune. So, maybe possible for rich people but not too practical for anybody else.

What most people in serious situations really need is something in their home that could dose them ongoing and in occasional peaks, much like the body itself should be doing. And of course, this is not just a matter of "dose and duration," but context, as mentioned -- there may be other substances (whether natural or pharmaceutical) which at certain points of degenerated-crisis, may be needed for the power to truly deal with things fast enough to save someone, or to compensate for the sudden ongoing ascorbic dose needed.

C's combination with other medicines including chemo stuff is actually amazing -- protecting the body from damage while making the medicine even more powerful.

Getting "Enough" Ascorbic

"Some" good is not "enough" good when you're dealing with hepatitis, viral pneumonia, severe burns, rheumatoid arthritis and more -- the onslaught is so huge in that case, the body needs a decent enough dose to deal with it.

This isn't unusual. When we take antibiotics, do we take 1/4 of a pill once? No, we take pills every four hours for a week or three. Sometimes, if that doesn't work, a stronger variety for just as long or longer. The concept of "dosage and duration" is understood plainly in medicine. This is no different when the 'medicine' is ascorbic.

When your body is fighting something powerful and pervasive, the dosage of whatever you're taking to fight it, needs to be matched to what it is fighting.  Kind of obvious, right.

In the case of ascorbic, it not only kills bad-things like many drugs can, but it also helps clean up the other bad things that are side-effects -- from other molecules created by the fight which may be dangerous, to what amounts to the little corpses of gazillion of now-dead bad-thing-cells and more. Plus some C is being used to help regenerate glutathione (the most powerful fighter in the body), and other hormones and vitamins (which are also doing both fight and repair in their own areas when you are ill or hurt) and it does lots of other power-building good things all over your body.

Drugs that we are given for illness don't do all that stuff. They may kill the bad guys, but they leave a disaster area inside that can be worse than the situation you started with. It's like fighting off a band of criminals in a neighborhood by having a tornado wipe out the city. Did it kill the criminals? Um, yeah. And a whole lot more destruction and mess besides. It didn't help anything else, it just killed the bad guys and made a mess. Drugs are toxic solutions. Sometimes the situation's so bad that is needed, of course. Drugs aren't necessarily bad, they have their place. But ascorbic is more like the strength and sunlight solution: it is toxic to bad guys, gives resources to good guys, and improves the entire environment and helps most everyone else while it's at it.

So ascorbic gets used up a lot when you are really sick, because it does a lot. That means that a decent amount of it is actually being channeled offside to do other things -- more than merely fight the main issue. So you're going to need a lot of it if you're really sick or hurt, enough that it can cover all the things it does, and still have enough left to fight the primary issues(s).

"Liposomal" delivery of substances

Years ago a novel form of "delivery method" for pharmaceutical drugs came around. By "delivery method" I mean some way of getting it into the body that works better than whatever was already being done. It's a problem that once things go through the digestive system, when you swallow a pill, often only a tiny percentage of them ever ends up anywhere but in the intestines, and even then that small percentage that got to the bloodstream may not end up right in the tissues where you need it.

This new option had technically been around since the dawn of time, since phospholipids are part of nature, but nobody thought of it like this, and we didn't have the technology to process it -- from getting the lipids in bulk to making their resultant format "very tiny" -- the way we do now.

Phospholipids are cool. As a lipid it's a type of fat. Lecithin, which is one example of a phospholipid, has a list of research-documented health benefits that just goes on and on. The cells look like long-sperms with slightly fat heads and somewhat firmer tails. They are present in pretty much every cell of the body. In the way that amino acids are "building blocks" of muscles, lipids are "building blocks" of cell membranes, nerve sheaths, veins and brains and glands and everything else (particularly things 'soft'. Bones are built with minerals more than fats; brains/nerves are built with lipids more than minerals). Even little components inside some cell types are phospholipids. They are everywhere, and lipids are one of the most primary needs the body has as a nutrient, to constantly rebuild itself.

The way these cells operate is interesting. If the temperature is above freezing and above ~110F, they "put their heads together." They arrange themselves like two long shoulder-to-shoulder lines, each line of heads facing together, tails sticking out behind. It looks like a zipper.

If the temp is below ~110F, they put their tails together instead. This can take a few forms but often looks like a starburst: all the tail points together in the center, all the heads like orbs around the outside of the circle. This circle is not 2-D though, it's 3-D, so it's literally a "sphere." Sometimes there are spheres within spheres! Or spheres that are not round but slightly different shapes.

There are some nifty youtube videos with graphic demonstrations of lipospheres.

If the lipids are in a liquid (let us say water) when they form the sphere, the sphere is filled with the liquid. The cells are basically changing their formation from 'double line' to 'sphere' under-water, so that makes sense, whatever is already there is just going to get captured inside along the way.

In the case of medicine, the liquid is the medicine, or it's dissolved in a liquid. So the spheres actually "encapsulate" that medicine. It's like a bunch of little fat-balls now, filled with the medicine.

Pharmaceutical drugs are even more complex. There are molecules that your body, your bloodstream, recognizes the shape of as belonging to one very specific place in the body. Let us say the amygdala gland in your brain. They can actually 'attach' a 'seeker-molecule' to the outside of those spheres, so that when they get into the bloodstream, the body sends them right to where we want them to go.

So when a sphere of phospholipids arrive in tissue, the body instantly starts breaking down that structure in order to use its "blocks" to build with in local tissue.

When this happens, it takes apart the sphere -- and whatever content it had inside it then dumps out into the tissues. So if you had a drug that needed to go to the amygdala region of the brain, encapsulating it inside a 'lipo-sphere' and attaching an amygdala 'seeker molecule' would get the sphere -- and its contents -- to exactly where you want it. Amazing!

There is one little detail along the way (at least) though. That is: the liver handles lipids. Usually when you ingest lipids, the liver breaks them down into little tiny pieces, little blocks, and then it sends out those individual or at least very small collections of 'lipid building blocks' around the body.

This would never work for the above scenario: it wouldn't help to have a seeker molecule then. And whatever was in the liposphere would just get dumped out around the liver, instead. If you're dealing with hepatitis, great, but if you really need to get something to the amygdala, not so great.

But it turns out the liver only does this with particles over about 200 nanometers (200nm) in size. If it's that size or smaller, the liver considers it small enough that instead of "unboxing and repackaging" to send out, it just forwards the box as-is, so to speak. This puts the sphere (with or without its seeker molecule, it does not have to have one, it just can) into the bloodstream, and then the rest can occur.

So liposomal encapsulation had a few steps those making a medicine with it had to take:
  • They had to get some phospholipids into a pure, usable form. The kind of phospholipids chosen would depend on the result they wanted. Cholesterol would be 'firmer' than choline, for example.
  • They had to get the medicine into a liquid form or dissolved in liquid.
  • They had to arrange it so the phospholipids would "encapsulate" the liquid they were mixed up with. Now, this happens naturally by mixing if the temp changes from warm to cool (if lipids 'open' when mixed with the liquid, then 'close' while in the liquid). But it's a much higher percentage of 'encapsulation' to use better tech, like a high-powered blending format, such as high-speed paint-gun-style slamming of it against a metal plate.
  • Then, those "spheres" needed to be a small enough size the liver would pass them through.
  • Then they had to get the 'seeker molecule' ready...
  • Then they had to attach the molecules to the lipospheres;
  • Then they had to package that in some format that would survive to get into a human.
So... it was work. And some substances are just never going to be small enough to encapsulate and still get it to under ~200nm size. That's why not everything uses this approach yet. But more and more pharmaceutical companies are beginning to do so, where possible.

Liposomal "delivery system" for Vitamin C

Several years ago, this fellow who'd been in the pharmaceutical research industry for eons, Dr. Brooks Bradley, had retired from his corporate job (he was a regional research manager at Eli Lilly corp for decades), and among other things was doing "experimental" work, mostly for fun/interest with associates.

He was the sort who knew the dark side of the industry, and actually cared about helping people. He's a great guy to read -- the sort that makes you want to have him talk about his amazing depth of life experience all day. Very smart, very polite, with understated humor in a way that is charming and drolly hilarious.

He was on an internet email list that related to colloidal silver, but when someone asked about a given condition, he would talk about a variety of things in his experience, which related to simple natural things people could try out just to see if it helped, or he'd talk about some of the things his team was working on that he found really interesting.

Meanwhile, some time previously, a guy named Dr. Thomas Levy, who had been involved with Vitamin C stuff for decades (he has a great book called "Curing the Incurable" about C), had joined a company (LivOn Labs) and they had managed to figure out how to use this "liposomal delivery" approach for ascorbic. Vitamin C had been Levy's big focus for a long time.

This was groundbreaking stuff for "orthomolecular" healthcare, because ascorbic has a century of research with mindblowing results in nearly every area (when used with 'proper dose, duration, and context' of course), but the big problem, as we've already covered, was getting enough of it down your throat (and not vented out the other end) to actually do you enough good.

If you could make ascorbic liposomal, most of it would not be going through the digestive tract: the liver would see it as a lipid and send it out to the tissues in the bloodstream. So right off, the whole bowel-tolerance limit was at least minimized if not mitigated; people could take a lot more. Whatever amount you took was "worth much more" to your body, than taking it in ordinary capsules for example.

Also, due to the way liposomes release their innards into tissues, you'd be getting ascorbic right into tissues -- right where you want it. Not just floating about the blood stream such as intravenous C does, which is very useful and is used, but it does still vent a lot out the kidneys. The blood can be one level of C while tissues are literally killing you from mass depletion: blood and tissue levels of C are not entirely reflective of each other. Liposomal encapsulation getting it to actual body-tissues would help the ascorbic "ingested" operate a lot more like ascorbic which had been internally created.

As if all that wasn't enough, a person could take it at home. They wouldn't need to have lots of money for arranging an IV of it. People could dose themselves with whatever they needed all on their own.

This was huge! Best. Thing. Ever!

Finally, a way to get it into our bodies so it was fully used, and into the hands of people to use themselves.

So, one day Dr. Bradley was talking about how his experimental team had been working to replicate what Dr. Levy's team had done, to make ascorbic into a liposomal formulation. They were using it and having great results, and he waxed poetic about how awesome it all was.

Making "Liposomal Vitamin C" at home: how it came about.

It was all very nice that liposomal C now existed, thanks to LivOn labs (and others, later). But it cost $1/1g for the stuff. If you wanted to take even 20g a day let alone a lot more for even a couple months, you'd best be independently wealthy. Once again, hope was restricted mostly to the rich.

I am not against companies making profit off the hard work they put into research and design and filling a need in the market. I liked Levy's book, and I respect his work in the field. That is the reasonable price for retail if the market is supporting it. I am grateful that they worked it out to begin with: merely "giving the world the idea" is awesome.

But still, there's a whole lot of people who said, "Isn't it sad that I can't begin to afford the stuff in enough volume to even seriously try it out."

It was almost a miracle that finally the natural-chemical our own body should make was available in a format allowing us to get it back into us in sufficient dosage to help with everything -- but the new 'delivery method' was just as inaccessible for most people as the old one. So close... but so far away. Most people still just couldn't get there from here.

So Dr. Bradley's group was looking for a way that a person could make it at home. Maybe it would require some technology or up front expense, possibly. But, maybe that would turn out to be far less than $1/g to buy it commercially, for those who needed a lot. So it was worth investigating.

Working out details

To begin with, a different kind of phospholipids would be needed; the lab he'd been replicating the work of had a proprietary thing. As it turns out, lecithin is a phospholipid used as a supplement (which contains a lot of phosphatidylcholine, what they'd been using), and due to market demand there is even sunflower non-gmo lecithin (not just soy) as source. You could just buy the stuff on amazon or something -- great!

Is it as ideal as the highly-developed proprietary version that LivOn Labs has? Naw, theirs is very specialized. Although that's not to say that the other parts of the lecithin might not have their own supplement value, separately from the ascorbic element -- a consideration that "Do-It-Yourself" (DIY) liposomal C has. Lecithin may be used as the 'carrier' but it's a worthy substance on its own merits. But would it work? Yes.

Ok, could we get ascorbic into a form that the phospholipids would "encapsulate?"  Sure, it dissolves in water. They will encapsulate water. And you could buy vitamin C powder, ascorbic acid, easily -- not only as a supplement but even in bulk. People use it to clean pools!

Can we make it so this encapsulation happens at home? Well, phospholipids tend to do this naturally anyway. Nature does it. If you want a tech solution you could try the way of the science they were initially replicating, which is sheer brute force, through the high-impact shooting style. Based on this as the source, the initial idea was that making it at home, possibly using a robust blender for a long time, would try to emulate a lesser degree of that impact force that made the encapsulation happen.

That was the initial idea, but at this point there is another, different approach (which I use) which does 30 seconds of high-speed (bullet-style) blending, twice (once before soaking and once before sonicating), but otherwise is more about "temperature control" than the blend-impact. With the correct temperatures, the lecithin lipids "open up" naturally in the warmth, and then "close up" naturally in the cool, to 'encapsulate its liquid medium' -- the dissolved ascorbic.

Is it as ideal as the high-tech version LivOn Labs has?  Naw, it would likely encapsulate less. What about the temperature version? Naw, that might encapsulate even less for all I know. And both probably result in much larger spheres, too, though we can hope the sonication will reduce them. But would it work to 'encapsulate' even some of it? Yes.

OK so lastly, how would someone at home get the "lipo-spheres" small enough that the liver would pass them through, kick most of them out to the blood stream without unpackaging them? There are a few technologies to do this; one is an ultrasonic probe, which is more expensive but probably more effective, but the other is an ultrasonic "bath" it's called -- basically a machine with a square metal bowl that you put fluid into, which vibrates at "ultrasonic speeds" and creates standing wave forms in the liquid.

This was a great option because these are available in the consumer market. People use them for cleaning jewelry and auto parts. So you could go buy one that held 2 cups for $40, or one that held 2+ litres for $80 for example -- definitely affordable for the person at home. (If you want to buy this stuff see my Lipo-C: Materials and Equipment Overview post.)

OK, so what if a chunk of it wasn't encapsulated? And what if a chunk of what was encapsulated, was too large to get 'by' the liver without disassembly? Well... so what? Wouldn't hurt you. And since the liver is what is fighting off all the bad things in the body, giving strength and materials and healing to that organ is a good idea if your body needs help.

Maybe even having the blended sonicated formula as "an emulsified, homogenized" liquid might cause it to be absorbed by the body differently -- it might draw less water into the bowel, as it might get more into the bloodstream or the lymph via the peyer's patches. This is not something that any existing science is present on, in order to know for sure what happens, and under what conditions. It's still new. If it turns out it works that way -- absorbed better due to homogenization with fats, not due to liposomal encapsulation -- that will still be very valuable.

What did seem likely is that at least some of it would be encapsulated, which would not go through the bowels for the most part. Even if the liver broke it down, most of our livers can probably use good ingredients on hand. Better my liver gets it than my toilet.

And at least some of it would likely be small enough lipospheres to get sent out to tissues. Mind you, we can't say "what" tissues specifically, since this is not seeker-molecule technology. But it seems fair to guess that if the body is fighting off an infection in the lungs, which means massive macrophages and new cells needing to be dealt with there, the liver's eventually going to start sending some of it to the front lines where that super-rapid cell turnover is going on.

So nobody knew for sure how much would encapsulate -- some for sure, but not all, that was sure too. Or how well the sonicator would reduce the size of what encapsulation there was -- some for sure, but not all, that was sure too. Or how having the ascorbic emulsified with lecithin might in any way change how the body absorbs it, in quantity or detail, who the heck knows. Nobody knows, I think.

But most people knew it was well worth a try!

Anything that increases the ascorbic quantity absorbed by the body, for any reason, to any degree, is worthy and good.

The fact that making it cost about 15-30% of what it cost to buy it, depending on the ingredients you choose, is awesome.

Sure, it's not as ideal a formula. Less encapsulated, less tiny-spheres. But it's still good.

Meanwhile, Bradley's team did some tests, they worked out approximate amounts of ingredients, then they had an associate lab freeze and slice open the liposomes and look at them to verify that yes, there was indeed encapsulation of the ascorbic (over 50%, as much as around 79% or so), and yes, at least some of the liposomes were small enough to get a free-pass through the liver.

Lipo-C: The Politics

So Levy was helpful when Bradley was replicating his stuff. He might have been a little put out by the fact that his company's primary money-making product then promptly had its internet market given a "make this at home much cheaper" DIY formula. This made a surprising number of people less willing to spend a dollar a gram on the commercial stuff. (Go figure.) The how-to spread over the internet like fire.

To be fair though, this is important: the DIY version is not nearly as dependably liposomal, or as dependably tiny-liposomal, as the commercially produced substance. If your life's on the line and you can afford it, get the commercial stuff! If you're doing research on 'liposomal C' - get the commercial stuff! Levy is also in a position where he doesn't want to see a less-effective substance used to invalidate or unfairly represent a quality liposomal C. Given that ascorbic has a long history of pharma competitors doing disingenuous  research trying to discredit C, it's important not to provide any additional help for that. So in this regard, he did have some good argument with people comparing the DIY version, which is mostly "emulsified and homogenized," to a full-blown commercial liposomal version like his company sells.

There was a "process" that Bradley had initially posted as a brief email on the internet. The "first DIY email" basically. This was followed (around the internet, actually) by a lot of back & forth and experimenting and tweaking it as-needed. Bradley encouraged this, telling people to "experiment around the edges" of it because "it isn't rocket science."

Some of the changes that many people made, were to shift from trying to blend-the-crap-out-of-it ('impact-encapsulation' I call it) to combine it, instead into the just-blend-a-bit-and-manage-the-temperature-of-it instead ('thermal-encapsulation' I call it).

Also, to often sonicate it for a great deal longer, but with lots of cool time between, to ensure the temperature (which naturally rises during sonication) didn't accidentally open the lipids again.

Bradley had later suggested a rough & dirty DIY way to 'measure' how much of the ascorbic was 'free' in the fluid result of your formula. Ascorbic acid will react with a bicarbonate, such as baking soda. So in theory you could test this and see "how much it reacted" and get some clue for that. (That is to say: any AA 'not' encapsulated would react. The stuff locked in fat-balls would not. So the greater reaction, the lesser the encapsulation.)

Then it was pointed out that while this was true, there are other things that can affect the reaction, including how rapidly the bicarbonate is added, how vigorously it's stirred together, and so on... and he had given some general direction on this, but of course you can't control let alone with precision what everyone else does. So it was not really too great a measure. He could tell you what the results meant when he did it, but he couldn't control the differences in how you might do it, so it was an iffy result.

Bradley apologized for the 'test' idea not being ideal. He suggested people just keep experimenting, because his own group's results with the at-home formula were totally worth it.

The Debate

Levy posted publicly that he had taken the initial email ("official formula" I guess) of Bradley's process and hired a third-party lab to do a review of this protocol to see their opinion on what percentage of encapsulation it ended up with.

Now, it's a given that Levy didn't exactly have an unbiased interest, given this DIY process was the primary competitor to his expensive product now. Then again, he didn't need to be unbiased, in a way; he hired a third-party lab to do it. That's why.

And I suppose it's fair to consider that he'd worked hard to come up with a way to do this and do it really well, and Bradley's way was at best a sort of "rough&dirty maybe" that depending on details could vary with every person, and so may work, or not, or not very well, depending on many factors.

Let's talk about the lipo-C home-made approach a little.

There are variables. There may be some instances in which a given approach that works for one person and is described "briefly in an email" would not work for someone else following it faithfully. That's probably one reason why in various emails over time, Bradley encouraged people experimenting with it on their own once they had the basic points down. Let me give some examples.

1. The initial approach was trying to replicate the impact-slam of the ingredients together which LivOn Labs had been using for their approach. This might work at home... er... maybe. But if your blender wasn't fast-tough enough, it might not.

(Of course, if you warmed it up from all the blending or sonicating and then it cooled, at least some would encapsulate anyway, just due to how phospholipids work.)

Nobody knows that detail except you, once you try it, and if that doesn't work*, then you experiment to find what does... as suggested.

2. Let us say your blender is more than powerful enough to slam all that stuff together at high speed and at length so that some decent chunk of it gets encapsulated 'by force'. If your blender gets warm with usage, then depending on your timing and the detail, you could encapsulate it, only to warm up the lipids, cause them to open again, and have them dump out whatever you'd just encapsulated. It would depend on your timing.

Of course, then later when the mix cooled, some would encapsulate, just maybe not as much.

You don't know until you try it, and if it doesn't work*, you experiment... as suggested.

3. Let us say that you use the temperature approach instead. I think this is far more likely to have good results in home-DIY formulas (but what the hell do I know -- I have no electron microscope! -- could be totally wrong), but that came about through discussion after Bradley's original formula, so was not what was tested anyway. But if I were using that approach, OR had the situation of #1 above, and if my lecithin started at less than 100 degrees F and never went above that for any of the process, that would fail. The spheres would already be closed before I even combined the lecithin with the ascorbic, and they would have no reason to open if the temp stayed low, so I wouldn't see encapsulation. This would be almost hard to do, but possible, and is about the only way to avoid getting at least some encapsulation even by accident.

Again: You don't know until you try it, and if it doesn't work*, you experiment... as suggested.

* How would you know if it didn't work??

Well, pretty easily actually:

1. The formula separates -- and promptly. A good formula has lasted in my cold fridge for three weeks with no separation. A really bad one is showing you layers by the next morning.

2. The formula tastes massively, kick-your-ass sour. Like you can barely drink it. A good formula tastes utterly vile from the lecithin of course, but that is bland like "Hi, I'm the digestive fluid of a lumbermill insect" sort of OMG-vile-bland, and then you have a sour 'kick' afterward. There is no way to mistake "no encapsulation" with "75% encapsulation" if your taste buds work at all.

(Note: AA rises when the formula is let sit. So the unencapsulated % will be tasted far more strongly at the top of a glass/bottle of formula that's been sitting for a bit, than in the middle. There WILL be some unencapsulated AA. It will be sour. This is a matter of "degree.")

3. Your "bowel tolerance" fails. A good formula (approx. 1.5 cups water quantity plus ingredients of 45g Lecithin and 15g ascorbic acid), if you take about 1/3 of it as a dose and 75% of it's encapsulated, you're going to get 3.75 grams encapsulated C and 1.25 not-encapsulated C. Most people who bother with Lipo-C have already been taking plain or buffered C and they know their general body limit of single-dose result (when not ill/injured). If you can take 1.25 grams of ascorbic acid and not have bowel-flush response, but taking 5 grams does give you response, then half a cup of your formula will make very clear how much of it hit your intestines rather than anywhere-else.*

* Note: it's possible some of it absorbs 'better' via the emulsion, regardless of encapsulation. But if this is so, I think we should be pretty happy about that, too. The primary goal is not encapsulation. The primary need is getting it into our body without it just venting out. Encapsulation only became a secondary goal as a way of meeting the primary need.

But even done poorly, the process would still probably encapsulate at least some material -- just perhaps not a ton of it. Because as noted, phospholipids do this, they encapsulate things -- naturally. You don't have to do anything technical for that.

You could have your neighbor's little kid dump a cup of liquid phospholipids into a parking lot puddle on a warm day, come back during the cool night and scoop some out, and some of it would be encapsulated. Those funky lipids just work like that... nature designed them that way. So as Bradley commented, it isn't rocket science. Just experiment until your approach, your details, work out.

Meanwhile, "stuff happened" after his initial sharing of the DIY idea of course. But the test was done on his initial formula post.

The Results

Levy announced that the third party had found: zero percent encapsulation.

I was actually still and silent when I first read that, in confusion. I had expected them to say, "Well the encapsulation percentage is like 30-50% lower and much of the spheres are too big to bypass the liver anyway and by the way Bradley's mamma wears Army boots."

I mean, it's a good guess from afar that this is what Levy was probably hoping they'd say.

"Nothing to see here folks, never mind! -- So... that will be one dollar a gram. We sell online!"

But zero percent? ZERO? Really?!

Now, as mentioned, phospholipids function like they do regardless of whether the person filling out that process might even be clueless, and regardless of what kind of blender they have, and regardless of what type of lecithin they use, and so on for nearly every detail. Even if you screwed up every step of the process, merely the lecithin "getting very warm from the blending or sonicating and then cooling again" would encapsulate at least SOME of the liquid medium, unless you were doing this in the cold room-temperature environment of a meat locker.

In fact, it would be difficult to explain how it wouldn't. This would be really hard to accomplish even on purpose. What magic would suddenly change the nature of phospholipids?

You won't be surprised to know that much of the internet responded with something like: "Levy just wanted that to be the answer."

One minute he's a hero and the next minute, he was considered speaker for a mercenary corporation that just wanted to make tons of money off the sickest people and wanted to quash any chance people might have of making it themselves. But it doesn't seem fair to make him a villain overnight just because he hired someone to test an internet email approach and they didn't get the results everyone would have liked.

Sure, he probably did expect -- given it was a different approach than he'd worked out -- and hope -- given it was his company's income at stake -- that the results wouldn't be ideal for the DIY result. But that doesn't mean the answer given wasn't really the answer. I trust that if he hired a third party lab to test it, that the results they got are as reported.

But the results were so extreme -- zero? Really?! -- that it made me completely distrust the protocol. Had they just been poor results I would probably have believed it without even questioning it. But results of ZERO encapsulation, when working with something like lecithin that encapsulates stuff as a simple matter of its very nature, made me believe something "disingenuous" was up.

I thought about what could be done to bring about this zero-percent-encapsulation as a legitimate outcome on purpose. Because it would almost have to be on purpose -- even using the protocol Bradley started with, it'd be hard as hell to get ZERO percent encapsulation by accident.

If you're standing in a verrrrry cold kitchen through it all, and the blender is cold and doesn't warm up and sonication is very brief so doesn't warm up (the original formula had times very brief, certainly less than I use now, and didn't specify temperature) -- if all those temperature elements were in place -- that could make those results happen.

But these are experts in a science lab doing the testing, mind you. So they know what factors will affect all this. If they "just happened" to work it out like that, well, the lab techs would know the predictable result before they even began, in that case.

As Bradley's post said nothing about temp, that could (hypothetically) have been done and still have "followed his process." And, you can choose what and how you measure when it comes to the lipospheres, of course; I have no idea what creative potentials might be there.

You could do these things to "passively arrange" for the results desired and still be totally above-board honest with "we followed his protocol and we got this result." So they could be totally telling the truth, but still be totally distrusted by people like me.

And I didn't notice Levy giving any details; he's the expert so if it didn't work "because of X" or "would work better with Y" he'd be a good guy to volunteer that, except that he likely doesn't want to volunteer it since he is selling competition.

Note that this formula works -- for one reason or another -- just fine. Before we get lost in armchair debate about this, I have to point out that it had already at that point been working quite well for many people. 

So a lot of people had good reason to think there was something questionable about the 'review' protocol integrity or report on it, because they'd already been making the stuff themselves, and it clearly had a very different effect than ordinary oral C had on them. Plus as noted you can actually tell when encapsulation is low in a formula -- it separates usually, it tastes overwhelmingly sour, and has vastly less bowel-tolerance.

Some people on the internet, with or without hands-on experience for cause, immediately took up the side of the Most Official Authority (the internet is such a fishbowl for watching peoples' psychology!), and ranted that Dr. Bradley had not, actually, published a detailed protocol in a peer-reviewed journal, and hence his approach and formula were "not scientific." Oh brother. The man is credentialed enough for any three people, so any accusations about his character really need to step back. As for the rest of that:

Others responded:

1. So? Since when does it require peer reviewed science for a person to use a blender to try something out and see if it works? "Sorry you have injury/illness/disease-X and really need lots of ascorbic. How about you just wait 40 years and see if the big money corps ever feel like funding and publishing something that validates this ok? Oh, you'll be dead by then? Too bad!" Anybody who actually needs health help is so weary of that sneering, arrogant response from people who want corporate-owned-science to control our world, it's just sickening at this point. I'm a science freak myself, even as a layman, but don't give me any guff about how something must have peer-reviewed publication before taking it seriously. That has become little more than a profit-filter on anything that isn't making health worse and corporations richer.

2. I didn't see any detailed protocol white paper of that "third party test" Levy arranged, either. So if we're talking about non-publication of details, Levy's claim from his hired lab is just as murky as anybody else's.

3. If the process as sketchily-outlined in email has a number of variables, which in some cases mean it won't work well for everyone, well it must be noted that Bradley did suggest that everyone experiment 'around the edges' of the basics to see what worked for them. He wasn't providing a 12 page white-paper of pedantic detail, he was just writing a simple email. A short one, even. That has limits, obviously!

But its main benefit was ordinary people could read it, understand it, and try it out. Add in a little bit of "and then fuss with it until it works for you" and it's all good. Giving the guy grief for sharing his ideas and test results free brings to mind that "No good deed goes unpunished" quip.

4. One dollar per gram. Did I mention the commercial stuff costs a dollar a gram? And comes in tiny gram-sized packets, some of the content you likely lose to the packaging, and has a lot of alcohol in it. A home blend, even if it were merely a fraction the liposomal result, even if it were nothing more than an emulsification that simply absorbed better as a lipid (like through the peyer's patches in the intestines) than the straight ascorbic or ascorbate -- well, the DIY version still lets you make a truckload of the stuff and drink it in bulk -- affordably. It's still not the cheapest supplement, but it's by far the worthiest.

And sure, I want to know why and how it works and lots of other armchair details. Who doesn't?

But FIRST, I just want to try it. Hands on. Do-it-yourself.

So I did. And wow! The results were great! Many positive results on me, from physical to psychological. And I didn't even have any kind of pressing illness.

Testing The Results

I mentioned above three main ways that you can tell how good your formula turned out. But the debate noted above makes clear that there probably ought to be a way, even if it is "not very exact," that people at home can test for "the amount of ascorbic left un-encapsulated."

I mentioned already the baking soda test that later was decided to be an unreliable way to rate your encapsulation percentage. It does give you 'feedback.' It's just that it isn't an absolute measure. But for example, say you had four different batches of the formula. If you did the test precisely the same for all four of them, differences in the test results would at least show you comparatively how much something was encapsulated or not, one batch compared to another.

From a distance via email, nobody can guess what the variables are for you personally. When something as trivial as how fast you dump in the baking soda, or how vigorously you stir it, can make a difference to the result, there's no way that it can be the same for everyone. So it's not reliable in terms of saying, "here is the % of encapsulation that X result means for you."

But one could make up formulations that vary the ascorbic and then test for a baseline.

Anything that "reflects" the ascorbic "quantity" in any fashion is a way to test the encapsulation ratio. Even though in most of these cases, you have to test it "compared to" something you know (like plain ascorbic-water or plain water) and compare. It wouldn't give you an absolute number, in other words; it would only give you a relative number compared to something else. Less ideal, but that works too.

Homemade Liposomal Vitamin C - Today

The debate is still in the air.

Dr. Levy stands by his claim about the third-party results implying that DIY Lipo-C is "zero percent encapsulation." But he's one of the good guys, despite that he is leading a company for which profit is involved in this.

I am actually guessing that Levy could add a great deal of insight to a home-brew DIY approach, tips to make it more effective -- albeit much less ideal than his own of course -- since although the process his corp has worked out is proprietary and uses ingredients and tech we can't, he's also surely expert at the subject; he was after all the guy who essentially brought lipo-C into being in the first place, right!

He is probably unlikely to be volunteering them, given it competes with his company's primary product. Ah well. I might add that legally if that corp has a board of directors he could be both fired and sued for telling people on the internet how to hack a cheaper version of his product. Some people there put a lot of money into the effort to arrange Liposomal C as a process and product. So don't blame him for his situation.

Dr. Bradley did say that his own third-party lab-review results showed DIY Lipo-C had at least >50% encapsulation. Bradley's one of the good guys too, and very credentialed and experienced. It is irrelevant that his means of sharing the idea happened to be via internet. (Critics of any idea found on the internet usually make it sound like "info on the internet" is as suspicious as Bridge real estate, and sure it can be -- but experts {and Bradley is one} and even Pubmed are on the internet too, you know.)

The people making DIY Lipo-C claim results worth having. This is reasonable, since if they weren't getting those, why even bother going to all that trouble and its more-expense? One might as well just take pills if it isn't any better. There are a few that don't, as well. Who knows what factors may be part of that. Probably every person just needs to try it for themselves and see.

Some don't do well with soy lecithin but like the sunflower lecithin. Some hate the process of working with the liquid lecithin (instead of pre-soaking powdered granules) and some it's the opposite. Some use modified paint-guns for high-velocity impact-encapsulation, while others like me use a little bullet blender and just manage the temperature instead.

I don't expect my formula to be anywhere near as good as LivOn Labs version of this. If money was no object, well and if they would package it in greater than 1g tiny little packages, then maybe I'd be taking their version instead. (Or not, because I have come to believe the value of the lecithin phospholipids in the DIY formula are worth having, totally apart from the ascorbic, and the DIY version has massively more of that.) But I am still closer to being able to get ascorbic in the quantity nature originally intended into my body. So it's all good!

PJ


Constant caveat: I am not a scientist. For "real science" you should read articles by people with academic credentials, of which I have none.

 


Useful links (although I recommend all the posts on this blog in the Vitamin C category):

My notes from Levy's excellent book, Curing the Incurable

Thomas Levy's company LivOn Labs sells liposomal Vitamin C and other things

Some of Brooks Bradley's DIY-C posts I found online that I stuck in a blog entry for ref

My post about the underlying, most primal function of ascorbic, its electron-flow results

My overview of Ascorbic, Bowel Tolerance and Absorption

Cathcart's actual 1981 white paper on that (tolerance and absorption) topic

A kinda cool 'summary image' I made of Cathcart's paper's data/figure/table/abstract

My overview of "materials and equipment" (and what matters) for making Lipo-C at home

A post where I summarized my internet-skim of all the alleged research-finding values of lecithin. Take this with a grain of salt, it has no refs, but was designed just to overview so I could then google for more info where interested. Lecithin is being taken in even greater dose than ascorbic with Lipo-C so it's obviously a critical ingredient.

A post where I copied excerpts from around the web that I found related to C, high-dose C, and Lipo-C. Take this with a grain of salt also, it was merely my first speed-read compilation. This is what I do on a topic and then I go back through, read what I excerpted on the fly, and google for more info on specifics.


November 19, 2013

Szent-Gyorgyi and the Dragon

Nobel prize-winning scientist Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, nearly a century ago, proposed that the essence of the living state is that organic molecules such as the proteins in the tissues of the body must be maintained in a state of electron desaturation.

All matter has varying proportions of electrons, protons, and neutrons, but Szent-Gyorgyi held that dead tissue had a full complement of electrons, while live tissue maintained a deficit of electrons.

Ascorbic acid interacts with a wide variety of basic chemical substances in the body. It is one of the primary substances assuring that a vigorous, continuing electron exchange takes place among the body’s tissues and molecules. Ascorbic is both an antioxidant and a prooxidant (depending) and it plays a significant role in the electron mechanics of the body.

Szent-Gyorgyi asserted that energy exchange, arguably life’s most important form of cellular communication, can only occur when there is an imbalance of electrons between and among molecules. This imbalance of electrons causes the natural flow of electrons, a biological form of electricity, throughout the body.

PJ's derivative. Credit: flickr.com/people/24048625@N03
All of the body’s functions are directed, controlled, and regulated by this physiological flow of electricity. Further, this flow of electricity through the body establishes and maintains the subtle magnetic fields in the body that appear to be involved with good health.

Ascorbic acid (AA), although possessing other important qualities, appears to be a most important stimulus to this flow of electricity. A greater amount of AA in the body enhances the flow of electricity in the body, thereby optimizing the ability of the cells in the body to maintain their health-sustaining communications.

One definition of life, then, is that it is a state in which an optimal degree of electron interchange among cells can take place. Health exists when electrons flow freely and fully, illness exists when this flow is significantly impaired, and death occurs when this flow stops.

When the electron flow is impaired, there is a need for more AA to help remedy the impairment. Since poor electron flow throughout the body’s tissues appears to cause or be associated with disease, this also means that there is typically an AA deficiency whenever the body is diseased. 

Because of this interrelationship, AA should always be a part of the treatment of virually any disease state. Just as dehydration requires water, poor electron flow — a primary characteristic of the disease state — requires Ascorbic Acid. This will virtually always apply, even when a deficiency of AA was not necessarily involved in the development of a certain diseased state (in the first place).

*

The above is a mostly paraphrased summary of a small piece of the book "Curing the Incurable" by Thomas Levy, which I highly recommend. You can find it via libraries free, or affordably used in any online bookstore.

What is the dragon, that which most interferes with the human body's primary electron activity?

Insufficient ascorbic in the body. 


Although it was not Albert who spoke of the enzyme-mutation that made just a bare few species on our planet now-incapable of making their own ascorbic (Irwin Stone was the initial researcher who pointed this out at some length), it was Albert who recognized that the lack of this or presence of this chemical was part of an underlying foundation for human health.

I think this is the most fundamentally important point of the role of ascorbic. The 8-gazillion things it "does" in the body are only a follow-on to that primary role.

Realizing the body's enzyme mutation that prevents our naturally creating it -- and our cultural resistance to taking a decent amount of it (particularly under body-challenge) to compensate for that -- is the most important "change your life" nutrient-understanding I've had.

So I wanted to start this blog with that.

Best,
PJ

P.S. Homemade Liposomal Vitamin C rocks!  (Sunflower non-gmo lecithin, non-gmo ascorbic acid, distilled water. Soak, blend, sonicate. You're set!) Much less 'concise' than the commercial variety, but still awesome -- and 1/10 the price. See links and other posts/pages for more info.

Constant caveat: I am not a scientist. For "real science" you should read articles by people with academic credentials, of which I have none.

October 31, 2013

Some archived posts of Brooks Bradley

Let me tell you about a guy I have an internet-crush on. That's the kind of crush where you just want to -- by analogy -- sit at someone's feet and have them tell you stories of their life or whatever they thought about today. He is like one of those men who has had this tremendous amount of life experience and just off the cuff will talk about something that happened before I was even born that is just damn interesting. I love people like that! His name is Dr. Brooks Bradley.

Here's a note about him from a guy who knows:

Brooks Bradley has been around a long time, but he is getting up in years, has suffered some personal tragedies and really is rarely very active anymore on the net.  He is from the Dallas/Fort Worth area and is retired as a Region Research Manager from Eli Lilly Company (1969-2005). He also worked a bit for the CVS Caremark Corp as a pharmacist, and does extraneous work as an independent Clinical Research Consultant. He knows the evil in the pharmaceutical business, knows a promising idea when he sees it, and wants to help people. Most of us on the net became familiar with him from his very valuable posts on the Colloidal Silver group, where he freely gave his time and suggestions to various health protocols that were cheap and DIY.

Two examples of why this guy cracks me up and is so much fun to read.

Responding to someone talking about research done with pyramidal shapes. {Note: I would sure like to do research comparing the primary platonic solids and possible effects of them. The pyramid is merely one of those shapes. - pjg}
Dear Marshall,

I was hesitant to make this reply, but some may find it of interest. In any event, confession is good for the soul.

Several years ago one of our technicians (in conjunction with my oldest son, an inveterate tinkerer) executed some loosely controlled anecdotal investigations involving pyramid structures possibly affecting the efficacy of some common pathogen control substances.

My primary interest being in CS, I suggested they include it in their investigation. Essentially, the methodology addressed utilizing substances exposed (at a position about 1/3 of the way up the inside height of the pyramid) to "whatever" energies might be present inside the enclosure for time periods varying between 2 and 12 hours.

The exposed colloidal silver was then used to treat 1/2 of a flock of chickens (young pullets) suffering from a known bacterial or viral insult. The first test involved Pullorum as the challenging agent. The remaining 1/2 flock was treated with part of the same parent CS batch, but unmodified in any way. Interestingly, both solutions effected efficient control, except the material exposed to the pyramid enclosure exhibited pathogenic control in approximately 1/2 the time required by the by the unmodified CS.

Additionally, tests involving potassium permanganate as a bactericide/bacteriostatic revealed that 1 normal solution strengths (after exposure inside the pyramid) displayed pathogenic control (when diluted to recommended strengths in drinking water) 2 to 3 times more rapidly than did the unexposed solution.

There were other chemical agents evaluated, but I do not recall their exact identity at this moment. Although not all exhibited such dramatic results, all were, somehow, measurably enhanced in their effectiveness when exposed to residence inside the little pyramid structure.

I must confess I was intrigued, but not overly so, at the time.

Both our technician and my son are contemporaries of Dr. Patrick Flanagan and of the 1960s philosophic genre, a circumstance which may have caused me to treat their efforts more abruptly than justified.

Sincerely,
Brooks Bradley.
Harborne Research Foundation
Funny huh. Yeah it was the 60s and he was a scientist so I can see he wasn't too open to it!

Here's a ref he put at the end of one email to a colloidal silver group. Everyone knows what it's like to write a long post and then have it eaten somehow before it gets posted...
p.s. I had, a few moments ago, just finished a much more extensive posting… I lost my entire post. The actual post you are receiving is the product of my existing dismay.
He just cracks me up without even trying.

So in the course of conversation on the CS group, BB would talk about things that the group of folks he experiments with has found, or stuff he'd done or experienced in the past. At one point, regarding the work with liposomal encapsulation of ascorbic that Thomas Levy had claimed was possible (prior to that idea you'd need an IV to get enough of it to be super useful for serious issues), he and his associates started studying that. He was really excited about it. He wrote:
We are Euphoric... almost... over our enthusiasm regarding a substance which became available about 24 months ago---and since subjected to a number of different evaluations.
While the actual materials are not (essentially) modified in chemical or biological essence... the FORM of delivery is GREATLY improved and we have enjoyed ASTONISHING results among all of our principal investigators evaluating these materials. These research evaluations revolved around substances yielded by a process called Liposomal Encapsulated Technology (LET). All of our evaluations involved either Liposomal Encapsulated GSH or Liposomal Encapsulated Vitamin C. A majority of our experimental cases involved LET-based Vitamin C.
About six months ago, inspired by the very recent (last 15 months) documented research of Dr. Thomas Levy, M.D., and associates, we endeavored to prosecute some evaluations of our own... which centered on vitamin C encapsulated by phospholipid liposomes. The actual material we utilized was obtained from representatives of a firm holding some exclusive procedural patents (Livon), but there are, probably, others now available... especially with the proclivities of firms for circumventing existing patents.
The material is called " Smart " Lyco-Spheric Nano-Spheres. The principal characteristic which enables the substance to yield such outstanding results, springs from its ability to present both in the blood stream and the inter-cellular environments----simultaneously. I could hardly believe Dr. Levy's original claims as to results they achieved.
To wit: that the oral ingestion of this " vitamin c on steroids " as the hype had pronounced it-----turned out (at least for us), to be ...exactly that. E.g. 5 Grams of the let-type vitamin c (taken orally) did, indeed, yield results comparable to 50 grams of iv administered vitamin c. We were, simply, astounded...by this result.
I will not attempt to elaborate on our specific experiments, but will state that our associates achieved some unbelievable results in very short time windows----and some involving stage iv carcinoma (which had proven unresponsive to all existing alleopathic protocols). The implications are simply staggering....for us.
The COST PROFILE simply COLLAPSES when considering such a simple---non-toxic----address to an amazing number of terminal-type insults. e.g. snakebite, botulinum, viral insults from across the entire spectrum, etc.
I must go now, but I encourage list members to conduct a web search on this manufacturing technology and the products available.....that actually exhibit the nano-encapsulation technology.
Do understand that some condition/circumstance may present itself, that could modify or, maybe, even negate our profound results... but I most SERIOUSLY DOUBT such will be the case. At present, we can hardly believe our results, but three other research groups (with whom we exchange information periodically... have effected results identical to ours.
People were interested, sure, but who has special patented material for phospholipids and paint-gun-style 1000-2000psi tools to make it? So with people talking about it, he and his associates started looking into what might be the options for making some version of this at home.
In our recent researches evaluating this technology and, consequently, in searching for possible "process" improvements/ modifications which might facilitate the " lay person " an opportunity for a DIY methodology achievable in a home environment---we did achieve some notable progress.
First, a brief summary of our exploratory activity. Our literature searches revealed several companies actively exhibiting valid capability in this area (LET). Typical, and demonstrably capable, is a company named MICROTEK. Microteklabs.com Helpful information is available here.
One fact became obvious, early on, to wit: The truly striking feature of LET was a NATURALLY-occurring characteristic...... and not a man-made process, that was driving this encapsulation process. That is, this process is a function of an automatic, "natural tendency" of certain substances (e.g. phospholipids in this case) to form tiny vacoules or bubbles---called liposomes----when in an aqueous solution under certain conditions.
The keystone activity is that these liposomes automatically fill themselves with whatever aqueous solution they were in----before they were formed. This type of bubble, called a membrane, forms a protective barrier around virtually every cell in the human body.
Livon Labs has perfected a process which employs a high-pressure (1700 p.s.i.) discharge system which directs a liquid stream against a forming plate. The high impact forces the phospholipids (soy lecithin in this case) to form liposomes----so small they require an electron microscope for viewing. This technology does not create the LET activity....it just enhances it. In our personal researches we have determined the key to exploiting the LET phenomenon appeared to be Livon's application of intense force in their mixing methodology.
Enter the " enlightening " moment. Searching for a method of achieving liposomal encapsulation, it occurred to us to explore ultrasonic stimulation as an option. It worked...maybe not quite as well as Livon's " high tech " brute force approach...but about 70% as well. Plenty efficient for our purposes.
Our vitamin " C " liposomal encapsulation protocol is as follows:
Using a small (2 cup) Ultrasonic cleaner, (Item #03305, obtainable from Harbor Freight), we performed the following:
1. Dissolved 3 level tablespoons of soy lecithin in 1 cup of water (preferably distilled).
2. Dissolved 1 level tablespoon of ascorbic acid powder (Vit. " C " ) in 1/2 cup of water.
3. Poured both solutions together in the ultrasonic cleaner bowl and turned the unit on. Using a plastic straw (leaving the top of the cleaner opened), gently, slowly, stirred the contents. Note: The cleaner will, automatically, self-stop about every 2 minutes. Just push ON button to continue. Repeat for a total of 3 series (6 minutes). By that time the entire solution should be blended into a cloudy, homogeneous, milk-like mixture. The LET solution is now formed.
4. This protocol furnishes about 12 grams (12000mg.) of vitamin C product. At 70% encapsulation efficiency, 8400 mg would be of the LET type. This solution will keep, acceptably, at room temperature for 3 to 4 days. Refrigerated, it will keep much longer. We use it so fast around our place...there isn't enough left to be concerned over storage.
The " homogenizing effect " is so powerful that after 3 days at room temperature, no precipitation or solution separation appears evident. This type of sequestered vitamin " C " has demonstrated to be, at least 5 times more effective (per volumetric measure) than any other form of orally-ingested vitamin " c "... that we have tested. Additionally, it appears to be even more rapid in tissue-bed availability----than IV applications. An astounding revelation... to us.
We estimate the DIY researcher can produce the active LET portion of this solution for 15 cents per gram... as against about $1.00 per gram from commercial sources.
It is my hope that this, limited, explanation of our activities in this area, is of some value to our do-it-yourself health-maintenance researchers. In any event, this protocol has demonstrated to be non-toxic and most helpful to our researches.
Sincerely, 
Brooks Bradley.
p.s. A larger, more powerful, ultrasonic cleaner is now available at Harbor Freight. Item number 91593. 2+ liter. Both units have performed quite well for us. Almost as well as our $500.00 lead zirconate titanate, research grade, unit.
So folks online went crazy trying it. Plenty who already took C, buffered C, could tell right off that they could take a lot more of it with less bowel-flush effects, so clearly something was going right.

It was known this would be "less" encapsulated than the lab version, but how much so?

BB came up on the fly with an idea that *might* work for very *roughly/loosely* estimating your encapsulation %. In other words, how much ascorbic acid was NOT inside liposomes but just floating around the liquid when you were done. This is the part that will affect bowel tolerance. Since ascorbic is an acid, and bicarbonate reacts with acid, he thought, well in theory if you mix them you're going to get the 'reaction.' You'd get more reaction with a greater degree of ascorbic.
Although not scientifically rigorous, I offer a simple test which will yield the DIY researcher some element of confidence that they do, in fact, have a useful measure of liposomal encapsulate.
First, pour about 4 ounces of your finished Vitamin C encapsulate into a cylindrical, 12 ounce water glass. Next, place 1/4 teaspoon of sodium bicarbonate into about 1 ounce of distilled water and stir for 3 to 5 seconds. Next, pour the sodium bicarbonate solution into the Vitamin C mixture and stir gently for several seconds.
Note: If the foam/bubble line which forms on top is 1/2 inch or less---in height---you have about a 50% encapsulation efficiency. If the foam/bubble line is 3/8 of one inch... or less, you have about a 60% efficiency. If the foam/bubble line is 1/8 inch or less, you have about 75% efficiency. If the foam/bubble line is just a trace... you should major in chemistry.
The percentages given above, represent the amount of the total Vitamin C component incorporated during the encapsulation process... that was actually encapsulated. The less encapsulation... the greater the foaming. What is, actually, occurring in this test is that the ascorbic acid fraction is being transformed into the sodium ascorbate form of vitamin C. This test does not negatively affect the usefulness of the solution you have tested... as the isolated Vitamin C component is not adversely affecting the encapsulate (which is being protected by the lecithin bubble-covering.) Actually, the sodium ascorbate form of vitamin C is greater than an order- of-magnitude more soluble for tissue incorporation... than is the ascorbic acid form.
In any event this simple test should serve to raise the level of confidence in the DIY researcher... that they do---in fact---have a useful measure of encapsulated vitamin C.
Sincerely,
Brooks Bradley
Meanwhile he addressed people who said they occasionally had a thin layer of brown (liquid lecithin) in their formula when done. (This just means you had more lecithin than water/ascorbic for it to encapsulate.)
My apologies; I neglected to outline the attendant, probable, variations in the protocol. What I SHOULD have said in my original post is "The visible, obviously homogenized, portion of the solution" , whenever I made the comment about the stability of the completed, resultant, material.
I believe you will gain a little better knowledge of the results you achieved, after reading my most recent comment on an inquiry by Sheila. Bottom line----your result was perfectly normal. Interestingly, the meniscus may present at the top... or the bottom... or not at all. Usually if the initial material combination has not run long enough to incorporate a majority of the lecithin (or there is simply too much lecithin for the available ascorbic acid fraction... the meniscus will form on the top of the sample... within a few minutes after stopping the US agitation.
If your procedure has run acceptably well and----long enough to homogenize well, any meniscus formation will, generally, present on the BOTTOM after overnight storage--- with or without refrigeration.
In any event, you are doing fine. If you do not want to consume the isolated lecithin fraction you are observing, just decant the homogenized liposome solution and dispose of the isolated lecithin fraction. I hope this information helps your dilemma.
Sincerely,
Brooks Bradley.
p.s. One just needs to continue to experiment "around-the-edges" of this protocol, in order to achieve optimum results. Do not be reluctant to do such... this IS NOT ROCKET SCIENCE... just common sense.
Later, after someone pointed out that even the quantity/vigor of adding/stirring the acid/bicarbonate can cause variation in the ascorbic and bicarbonate reaction, he wrote a note apologizing for it not being a very good test as it turns out. My excerpted summary:
The ONLY truly reliable means of, accurately, knowing the degree of encapsulation is via Electron Microscopic observation. This entails preparation protocols/equipment beyond means of most persons----even most laboratories. ... In my enthusiasm to avail list members of a "simple" protocol, which had yielded results reliable enough to validate useful parameters... I outlined a test which is *not truly indicative* of the encapsulated Vitamin C content. ... Although some may be able to replicate my results, the protocol proper, is too unreliable for general application. We HAVE determined, via electron microscope examination by an associated laboratory... that almost any solution achieved using the simple procedures outlined in my original post for producing encapsulation... yields >50% encapsulation. One excellent indicator is the degree of "apparent homogenization". That is, the uniform, milky, appearance... and its "long-term" (days) retention.
P.S. I would be remiss if I failed to encourage ALL OF YOU to continue your researches addressing use of this most promising protocol for encapsulation. The majority of our investigations have yielded VERY powerful positive results.
Meanwhile, people on the net were trying to figure out ways to get more ascorbic into the water. If you could dissolve more ascorbic in the water, you could in theory encapsulate more ascorbic, and be able to take even more.

One approach used is magnets. Water exposed to powerful magnets (time required varies) will have the surface tension of the water molecules (increased? reduced? I don't know). This is like that stuff you put on your car windshield and then water runs right off it. Chemical soap is what we use to reduce surface tension in water like in laundry and dishes. Well magnets can affect surface tension in water also. It literally "makes water wetter" is how some people put it. It also allegedly allows a greater absorption/dissolution of water-soluble substances, including ascorbic acid.

I cannot find the page I had on it eons ago and I have not yet tried it, so I don't know. But, seems like a good idea. I just found a few of my magnets recently... dunno if they are strong enough. I haven't yet googled on how to MEASURE surface tension in water in some simple at-home way, if possible, in order for me to experiment and see whether or not I'm doing so.

*

From the vitamin C foundation forum a guy named Steve Brown said this which I found helpful:
I've calculated the exact amount of sodium bicarbonate required to neutralize ascorbic acid. It is 0.477 grams of sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) for 1 gram of ascorbic acid (C6H8O6). That is the mass ratio, the amounts you would weigh on a scale.

If you don't have a scale and want to measure by volume, the ratio is different, because sodium bicarbonate is denser than ascorbic acid. The volume ratio is 0.358, so to neutralize 1 teaspoon of ascorbic acid, 0.358 teaspoon of sodium bicarbonate is required. Stated another way, the volume of sodium bicarbonate is 35.8% the volume of ascorbic acid it will neutralize.

When combining sodium bicarbonate with ascorbic acid, it is desirable for them to react chemically, converting the ascorbic acid to sodium ascorbate. That is best accomplished by first mixing the powders, then adding a small amount of warm water.

*

Another guy I once saw, raved about adding bicarbonate *before* making the formula. He said that this allowed a great deal more dissolution of C into the same amount of water. I am confused here because I saw in several places that you could not use mineral ascorbates for making lipo-C, the reason being that the mineral would cause it to "fall out of encapsulation" -- and many people trying this ended up with layers, it wouldn't even stay homogenized for long, and were told to use ascorbic instead. Or, that the vastly larger resulting molecule would not allow small enough liposomal spheres that the liver would send them out as-is. One goal here is to have them sent to body tissues, not broken down at the liver, which it will do if they're over ~200nm in size.

I saw another ref where someone said: "BTW, Brooks just came out and is now suggesting to use the baking soda before encapsulation with the lecithin in order to have sodium ascorbate, which is 3000% more assimilible that plain L-Ascorbic Acid."  But I am not sure Brooks said that, I mean said to do it before encapsulation instead of after; I am asking for a reference. He DID say "...the sodium ascorbate form of vitamin C is greater than an order-of-magnitude more soluble for tissue incorporation... than is the ascorbic acid form." That is a known. But that doesn't specify whether to use it before/after creating the encapsulation formula.

*

There are other posts of BB I saw, and he is charming and interesting but I feel like if I replicate most his posts, I'll be a stalker-fan (too late!), aside from which they technically belong to him and the group he sent them to. But his "recipe" and comments on DIY Liposomal Vitamin C are literally all over the internet -- I got the posts from somewhere totally unrelated to where they began! -- so I don't feel badly grabbing these as a) they are already everywhere and b) I think it's totally fair if you start an internet-wide health hobby, that your posts critical to that actually be replicated for people to hear the 'original' version and not just the 2.8 billion alternatives. It would seem injust both to him and to everyone trying out the DIY plan based on his original guidelines, if his stuff about it wasn't widely accessible.

PJ

August 18, 2013

The Ascorbic in Liposomal C

Intraveneous Vitamin C Has Performed Miracles
http://w3.newsmax.com/newsletters/blaylock/issues/93/blaylock_93_vitc0312.pdf

Notes, Comments, Reviews, Tidbits, Trivias 

-- collected miscellany from around the web (and a few are my notes to friends) on Vitamin C. Some is just about AA, some is about venous C, some is about Lipo-C. This is just a 'drive by' speed-read search result on the topic designed to give me some clues for search out better details. No references.

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Comment: When my daughter was 17, her new boyfriend gave her hepatitis. On a Monday, I took her to her pediatrician (who hadn't a clue). Based on her temp of 105 degrees and her butter yellow eyes, I asked that she test her for hepatitis. That's what she had. Her liver was in such bad shape that the doctor wanted to hospitalize her. I refused. By this time her former boyfriend was in the hospital himself. I brought her home and started giving her major doses of vit. C. She took it five times a day, 10 grams (not milligrams) each time. She must have really needed it; taking 50 grams a day gave her no side effects and she was on her feet in a week. The boy was in the hospital for six weeks and was a physical wreck when he finally got out. The Saturday after she had been diagnosed my daughter was well enough to have dinner with friends. On Monday I took her back to her doctor and discovered that her liver was nearly normal. I think the doctor must have believed in divine intervention because she strongly resisted the idea that Vit C could have had anything to do with her rapid recovery.

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“I had been a practicing pediatric gastroenterologist for 25 years. During that time I watched some really beautiful children and young men and women die under my care because I had nothing more to offer, and unfortunately what I had offered many times only made their lives more miserable. …After reading Doctor Yourself by Dr. Andrew Saul, I have become a very angry man. I've just realized that for 25 years I had been making my patients sick and big pharma rich. I've just realized that those chronic hepatitis patients that died waiting for a liver transplant could have been easily cured with vitamin C. I realize now that my toximolecular medical education only led me to do more harm than good. That is not a good feeling to have. I only wish that all my critically ill patients had read Dr. Saul's book and fired their doctor. Doctor Yourself in fact has inspired me to now open an exclusive orthomolecular medicine practice for children and adults of all ages, and copies of the book will be in the waiting room for all to read. In the names of all those I didn't help before, I hope this time to make a difference.” ----(Edward Cichowicz, M.D.)

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The pituitary and adrenal glands have one of the highest tissue concentrations of vitamin C. In healthy vitamin C producing animals pituitary ACTH and then adrenal cortisol production rises when stressed, and concurrently, vitamin C production, increasing serum vitamin C. A sufficiency of vitamin C enhances the production of ACTH, cortisol and adrenaline (epinephrine) so that the initial response to stress is improved.[...]

Among other benefits, increased cortisol and epinephrine allow more powerful punches or faster running from danger (fight or flight) and less inflammation if ill or injured. The production and release of large amounts of vitamin C concurrently or immediately following cortisol release rapidly reduces cortisol and epinephrine to within normal range, the pre-stressed state.In animals not producing vitamin C, or those with lower production due to aging, chronic stress may lead to reduction in body stores of vitamin C, exhaustion of epinephrine production and inappropriately elevated cortisol. This has great downsides.

Excess cortisol or inappropriately timed cortisol will slow healing and when dis-regulated contributes to anxiety and mood disorders, insulin resistance, obesity, metabolic syndrome, insomnia and fatigue. Excessive stress may eventually lead to low cortisol and adrenal exhaustion.

Animals... make their own vitamin C. The post stress production of abundant vitamin C and return of cortisol levels to unstressed ranges, restores tissue vitamin C to be ready for future stress. Humans also release vitamin C during stress but they must take from body stores and as tissue levels are depleted (no GLO) the ability to recover from stress is reduced and eventually lost.

If we do not make C and we do not take C, over time, we will use up all available body stores and find ourselves with inappropriately elevated cortisol and lower epinephrine production and eventually, if the low C/stress cycle continues, in full adrenal exhaustion, little cortisol production remaining. Vitamin C not only maintains and balances cortisol and epinephrine but, given in appropriate doses, restores normal epinephrine and cortisol production (recovery from the effects of chronic or acute stress including PTSD).

The current accepted treatment for cortisol imbalance/adrenal exhaustion, using adrenal supplements, ginseng, or even cortisol supplementation, all fail to replenish that one important, irreplaceable key to long term health, vitamin C.

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the clinical literature showed getting enough calcium and vitamin D did NOT reverse bone loss. It did seem to decrease falls and fractures, not a bad thing. It was frustrating to realize D and calcium were not useful to prevent or cure osteoporosis or osteopenia. Clinical studies since that time further confirm while important to bone health D and calcium are not the primary key to healthy regeneration of BONES.

Now I know why. In 2010 a study from Baylor College of Medicine using the KO (gene knock out) mouse showed PROFOUND bone loss, rapid osteoporosis, when mice were stressed and adequate vitamin C became vitamin C deficiency (but NOT scurvy). Getting enough vitamin C throughout one's life, in addition to adequate vitamin D and minerals, may keep bones healthy and prevent hip fractures and the need for hip replacements. Even adding vitamin C later in life may prove to stop and even reverse bone loss.

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Low ascorbate status is associated with gallstones and gallbladder disease.) Increasing vitamin C intake increases bile production, lowering bile saturation and improving absorption of the fat soluble vitamins and essential fatty acids. Vitamin C also decreases cholesterol by improving hydroxylation of cholesterol into hormone production and into bile acids.

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Vitamin C plays a primary role in many hydroxylation reactions including vitamin D3 hydroxylation to the active 1,25(OH)2D and the conversion of l-tryptophan to 5-hydroxytryptophan, the precursor to serotonin. Other such key hydroxylations include that of cholesterol to pregnenolone and then to other hormones including cortisol, testosterone and progesterone, production of normal collagen, and production of carnitine necessary for muscle energy, fat metabolism and muscle strength.

Two of the early symptoms of scurvy are fatigue and depression. Researchers think it may have to do with a lack of carnitine.

In research guinea pigs, who like humans are unable to produce their own vitamin C, given 100 mg vitamin C, 5 mg vitamin C plus 10 mg carnitine, or 5 mg vitamin C (guinea pig RDA) only those given 5 mg vitamin C with 10 mg carnitine or 100 mg vitamin C alone improved carnitine production and only the 100 mg vitamin C group showed reduced triglycerides.(54) In human equivalents the 5 mg dose would be 750 mg daily (150 lb human), well above the current DRI; the carnitine equivalent, 1500 mg (150 lb human); the 100 mg vitamin C group would be equivalent to 15,000 mg (150 lb human). Carnitine allows us to burn FAT for ENERGY. Carnitine insufficiency contributes to fatigue, often profound.

Vitamin C also reduces histamine and has been used to ameliorate allergies, asthma, and histamine induced mood disorders.(55) Vitamin C dependent actions regarding increasing epinephrine, increasing 5-htp/serotonin, lowering histamine and optimizing levels of active vitamin D suggest an amazing variety of functions all related to feeling good. Abundant intake of Vitamin C and C rich foods might make our world much less stressed and happier.

Vitamin C will NOT work by itself. Vitamin C facilitates cell structure and function. Collagen production requires protein, as does carnitine production. Vitamin D requires either a supplement or sunlight. Your immune system needs zinc and protein (and many other things) plus vitamin C. Vitamin C makes what you eat, protein, carbohydrate, fatty acids, vitamins and minerals, work, PERIOD. When Linus Pauling and others described vitamin C they called it the HEALING factor. Healing, building, regenerating, vitamin C makes all elements and thereby bodies work better.

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creates a vitamin C containing phospholipid particle that

1. Allows rapid and direct absorption from the small intestine into the liver and then into your blood.

2. Allows rapid absorption and delivery from the blood into body tissues, the ultimate bioavailability, intracellular delivery, including the mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, and even the nucleus of cells.

This improved delivery system not only increases the amount absorbed into blood and tissues, it allows for serum elevations of ascorbate equivalent to intravenous vitamin C.

When vitamin C is ingested in amounts greater than 500 mg about 19%-38% is actually absorbed so a capsule or tablet of 1,000 mg would provide about 190-380 mg to your body. It has to do with bowel kinetics. The higher the oral dose of vitamin C, whether ascorbic acid or sodium ascorbate or other mineral ascorbate) the lower the absorption percent; this is similar to what happens when you take calcium, at 250 mg 40% absorption, 2,000 mg 14% absorption (Heaney, see the Workbook).

Due to the phospholipid shell and small particle size liposomal vitamin C has absorption percentages ranging from 70-93% providing 700-930 mg per 1,000 mg of liposomal C, an increase of 50-75% more per equivalent ascorbic acid dose. And because the liposome does not increase water kinetics higher doses are not lost in the bowel (diarrhea).

Vitamin C has shown promise in cancer treatment when serum levels remain extremely high over a 24 hour multi-day (24/7) time period. This level has only been possible using thrice weekly high dose intravenous vitamin C. Studies show serum levels using oral liposomal C reach levels equal to those levels found to be effective in cancer treatment. This ability to reach higher serum levels of vitamin C is equally important if you have a chronic illness or degenerative disease whether heart disease, osteoporosis, degenerative disc disease or joint degeneration.

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Vitamin C is not an element (like a mineral or protein or fatty acid) but a facilitator. Vitamin C makes everything work the way it was INTENDED to work. Giving vitamin C to mice bred to express Werner's Syndrome (early premature aging) completely reverses the syndrome. Vitamin C regulates both the creation of new bone and destruction of old bone promoting a healthy skeleton, young and old.

Serum C does not and will NOT reflect tissue levels. What tissues? Every tissue, every cell in your body, skin, muscle, bone, teeth, all organs, pituitary, adrenals, heart, kidney, liver, ovaries, testes, and your brain, contain and require vitamin C.

The last one tells the ingredients which suggests that people can make their own pretty much the same way the liposomal vitamin C is made. I wonder if it would be useful to make vitamin C and glutathione together? Especially for folks with leaky guts?

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Also, there is a study that suggests that the liposomal version does cross the BBB.

Study did not say it ALWAYS happens just that under many conditions it will/can.

Although research has not clearly shown how the therapeutic agents in a liposome are actually released, there are a couple of theories. One theory suggests that the phospholipids are processed in the liver as fats and that this process releases the vitamin C. Another theory proposes that cells all over the body, hungry for phospholipid materials to repair cell membranes and other cellular structures, "steal" these materials from the liposome allowing their contents to leak out.

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I decided this morning to see if the dehydroascorbic acid would make up in solution as well. If you recall, this form of vitamin c is the one that crosses the BBB very well and also goes directly into the mitochondria. See the following links for more info and also do some searching on your own:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dehydroascorbic_acid
http://www.pnas.org/content/98/20/11720

Note - I wouldn't use that - pjg

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A thing that can increase your tolerance to vitamin C by a LOT is food allergies. Any condition or disease were histamine is found in high levels will increase it too. According to the papers quoted, it can take months before your body's tissues get stocked up in their vitamin C content.

If you have adrenal fatigue, you will need a lot more and over several months as well before your adrenals get replenished. In fact, it might decrease the need for physiological cortisol therapy, or obviate it altogether. I'll do both for the time being.

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Ascorbic acid plus sodium bicarbonate makes sodium ascorbate, not DHA.

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I experimented with the sodium ascorbate version which allows for higher concentrations in the solution since you can dissolve more ascorbate in a given amount of water than pure ascorbic acid. That means I double the amount of ascorbic acid to 18 TBSPs and add 10 or 11 tsps of sodium bicarbonate to the Vitamin C mixture (incrementally) and stir and dissolve that until bubbling has stopped before I add it to the SAME proportion of lecithin, i.e. 3 cups water, 9 TBSP of lecithin.

You can't increase the vitamin C much over 3 TBSPs per cup of water and get it into solution without the bicarb. BUT the same amount of lecithin handles this doubled amount in ascorbate form quite well. The solution is rich and milky and never settles.

So, with ascorbic acid:

1 cup water, 3 TBSP acid form of vitamin C to 1 cup water and 3 TBSP of lecithin.

But with sodium ascorbate:

1 cup water, 6 TBSP vitamin C, 3 or 4 tsps of sodium bicarbonate added to 1 cup water with 3 TBSP dissolved lecithin.

As I said, I triple it every time and end up with 6 cups of product which takes about 25 minutes in the ultrasound chamber. I have found that I have to make this amount every other day to keep the supply available for everyone.

As I wrote earlier in this thread, I weighed a legal TBSP of vitamin C (level) and it was 10.67 grams. So that would be 32 actual grams of vitamin C per cup of water which is around 130 EFFECTIVE grams of vitamin C taken up by the liver.

BUT that amount is doubled in the sodium ascorbate variation to 64 actual grams of vitamin C per cup and well over 250 EFFECTIVE grams taken up by the liver. (Obviously, you only need a shot of this about two or three times a day!)

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I tried an experiment recently in attempting to make liposomal magnesium in some form and want to report back on my results. First, I tried magnesium citrate powder; I used about a tablespoon for a cup of cold water, but the water remained cloudy (maybe I added too much, though I did mix it for a while) and it didn't end up becoming liposomal--it separated (and smelled a little weird).

The second time I tried using magnesium ascorbate powder, about 3 tablespoons, in a cup of hot water (attempting to better dissolve it after the first experiment); the water first turned blackish and then kind of reddish brown after mixing for a while, but looked basically dissolved otherwise, and it didn't become liposomal at all--it looked like it curdled the lecithin for some reason as there was reddish water and chunks of stuff.

I looked around online for a little while too to see if anyone had made or was selling liposomal magnesium in one form or another and couldn't find anyone doing either, so right now I'm not sure that it can be done.

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I've also been taking it with liposomal glutathione to aid in detoxing my liver.

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Interestingly, sugar in the body inhibits the uptake of vitamin C into cells. Both glucose and vitamin C bind the same receptors so they compete with one another. Glucose does not inhibit the uptake of DHA into cells, however.

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The one thing all the papers talk about is how to increase stability of the liposomes to extend their half-life in the blood, so as to concentrate the delivery of drugs to the tissues that need it. Liposomes are quickly undergoing phagocytosis by macrophages, which means that the drug spills into blood, liver and spleen, but doesn't go to other tissues well. One way of stabilising liposomes is to attach polyethylene glycol (PEG) onto the outside membrane which hold off the cells that eat up the liposomes. The longer the PEG chain, the longer the liposome survives in the blood and is able to accumulate at other sites. As to the amount they say 5 - 8 mol% of lipid content (I haven't worked out yet to what amount of PEG that translates). The result would be to have more sustained levels of vitamin C in the blood and avoiding the troughs in between doses.

They talk mainly of iv administered liposomes, but I think by inference this might be applicable to oral formulations as well. I was thinking of experimenting with adding some PEG-4000 to my next batch of lipo C.

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My blood tests are back and, as I suspected, my ferritin is quite high considering what the cutting edge experts consider to be healthiest.

I ordered some calcium EDTA and a book on chelation: So I'm going to be making some liposomal EDTA to help with the "unloading".

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Polyglycerol polyricinoleate, or PGPR, is an artificial emulsifier that was granted GRAS status by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2006. Since then, its use has grown substantially, primarily as a coating in candy and an inexpensive replacement for cocoa butter in chocolate manufacturing. Derived from castor oil, PGPR may be used safely as a substitute for soy lecithin. Due to the limited number of manufacturers producing PGPR, however, PGPR is not as readily available as other vegetable- and animal-derived lecithin substitutes.

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Early symptoms of scurvy are malaise and lethargy. That’s basically a “general feeling of being unwell” along with tiredness or exhaustion.

After a few months comes shortness of breath and bone pain.

Further down the road is muscle pain, skin sores, gum disease, loose teeth, wounds not healing, dry mouth, dry eyes, and emotional problems.

In the late stages comes jaundice, edema, fever, convulsions, and eventually death.

Note that like any 'group of symptoms' not ALL of these must occur. It likely varies by person.

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oooh good point:

I think you would expect higher tissue concentrations with higher blood concentrations, assuming that the C was traveling into the tissue. As an analogy, a diabetic with high blood sugar levels has lots of glucose in the blood, but the problem is the cells are not allowing it to enter. It could be because they are saturated, or it could be because they are resistant. But that brings us to the basic question, is the C concentration in the blood higher because the cells are full or is it because the cells are not accepting the C.

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I also bought some d-ribose powder and plan to make that into a liposomal concoction.

Must dissolve in water or the effort is doomed. - pjg
Though I'm going to try some stuff in dmso. - pjg

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My apologies; I neglected to outline the attendant, probable, variations in the protocol. What I SHOULD have said in my original post is "The visible, obviously homogenized, portion of the solution", whenever I made the comment about the stability of the completed, resultant, material.

I believe you will gain a little better knowledge of the results you achieved, after reading my most recent comment on an inquiry by Sheila.

Bottom line----your result was perfectly normal. Interestingly, the meniscus may present at the top...or the bottom.....or not at all. Usually if the initial material combination has not run long enough to incorporate a majority of the lecithin (or there is simply too much lecithin for the available ascorbic acid fraction.....the meniscus will form on the top of the sample....within a few minutes after stopping the US agitation.

If your procedure has run acceptably well and----long enough to homogenize well, any meniscus formation will, generally, present on the BOTTOM after overnight storage--- with or without refrigeration.

In any event, you are doing fine. If you do not want to consume the isolated lecithin fraction you are observing, just decant the homogenized liposome solution and dispose of the isolated lecithin fraction.

I hope this information helps your dilema.

Sincerely, Brooks Bradley.

p.s. One just needs to continue to experiment "around-the-edges" of this protocol, in order to achieve optimum results. Do not be reluctant to do such...this IS NOT ROCKET SCIENCE....just common sense.

and:

....by just increasing the water volume and reactivating the US Cleaner for several minutes....the remaining lecithin will (in almost all cases) go into the emulsified solution. However, bear in mind, you have diluted the entire solution by an equivalent strength-----with NO increase in total vitamin C component.

Bradley is the guy who came up with the DIY liposomal C idea and made it public on the internet -- Palyne

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Although not scientifically rigorous, I offer a simple test which will yield the DIY researcher some element of confidence that they do, in fact, have a useful measure of liposomal encapsulate.

First, pour about 4 ounces of your finished Vitamin C encapsulate into a cylindrical, 12 ounce water glass. Next, place 1/4 teaspoon of sodium bicarbonate into about 1 ounce of distilled water and stir for 3 to 5 seconds.

Next, pour the sodium bicarbonate solution into the Vitamin C mixture and stir gently for several seconds. Note: If the foam/bubble line which forms on top is 1/2 inch or less---in height---you have about a 50% encapsulation efficiency. If the foam/bubble line is 3/8 of one inch...or less, you have about a 60% efficiency.

If the foam/bubble line is 1/8 inch or less, you have about 75% efficiency. If the foam/bubble line is just a trace.....you should major in chemistry.

The percentages given above, represent the amount of the total Vitamin C component incorporated during the encapsulation process.....that was actually encapsulated. The less encapsulation....the greater the foaming.

What is, actually, occurring in this test is that the ascorbic acid fraction is being transformed into the sodium ascorbate form of vitamin C. This test does not negatively affect the usefulness of the solution you have tested.....as the isolated Vitamin C component is not adversely affecting the encapsulate (which is being protected by the lecithin bubble-covering.) Actually, the sodium ascorbate form of vitamin C is greater than an order-of-magnitude more soluble for tissue incorporation......than is the ascorbic acid form.

In any event this simple test should serve to raise the level of confidence in the DIY researcher.... that they do---in fact---have a useful measure of encapsulated vitamin C.

Sincerely, Brooks Bradley.

p.s. I had, a few moments ago, just finished a much more extensive posting.....but some form of invasive advertising spam flashed across the top of my mail system and in attempting to circumvent/nullify the invader I lost my entire post.

The actual post your are receiving is the product of my existing dismay. --

Bradley later apologized that there are variables in performing the above process which make it fairly inaccurate (sometimes) for measure and hence is not a good way to evaluate it. He suggested whether it falls out of solution is one clue. pjg

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I actually heat up the 1.5 cup distilled water to pre-boil temps. Once it starts to get those boiling bubbles (the begining stages), I turn off the water, pour straight into a mixer with the lecithin, and mix it for a good 10 minutes. Then i refrigerate the mixture overnight.

Next day, I mix the lecithin/water mix again in a mixer for 5 mins, add the .5 Vit C water, mic for another 5 mins, then straight into sonicator. The Sonicator heats up pretty good at around the 15 min mark, so at 15 mins, I stop, empty the mix into a pyrex measuring cup, refrigerate to cool it back down, and 30-40 mins later, do the other 15 mins in sonicator.

Works every time

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I am using the larger 160 watt harbor freight US unit for these experiments. I did finally get a chance to use the granular lecithin, and it is MUCH less messy than the liquid form. Much more highly recommended just from the stand point of clean up. That being said, the final product did not seem to be any different than from when I used the liquid lecithin.

some people talked about the lipo-c dramatically reducing niacin flush. still working on why that might be.

As I already noted, I get quite strong flushes while increasing Niacin. Usually I feel intense heat and tingling sensations mainly in my head and in the upper body; my arms, throad and sometimes more parts of my body turn red, and I get some strange pressure in my ears - which usually all eases after 20 minutes. Titrating upto 45 grams of Vit C to my bowel tolerance for more than 2 weeks didn't change anything about that. But since I started to add the 12 gram of self-made lypo-C mixtures Niacin flushes have completely ceased if taken after the lypo-C. And are much more milder if taken a half day apart. To me this is a really big change to regular oral ascorbic acid.

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Dr. Donsbach is talking about lecithin as a phospholipid liposome carrier and raising temperature to 110 degrees to open them up.

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I've used the one pint UC to make Lypo C and liked it so well that I bought and have used the larger 2.5L unit. I've made homemade Lypo C in the large unit by:

1. Using a blender I dissolved six tablespoons lecithin in two cups of water. Dissolve two tablespoons of ascorbate in one cup of water in a separate container. Pour the water/ascorbate solution into the blender with water/lecithin and turn on blender for a few seconds. Pour blender contents (water/lecithin/ascorbate) into the 2.5L UC.

2. Repeat Step 1 twice. In the UC are now nine cups of water, six tablespoons ascorbate and 18 tablespoons of lecithin. The UC is now full of the mixture.

3. Run UC for a total of 30 minutes without heating.

You now have nine cups of Lypo C solution.

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Brooks Bradley used a scanning electron microscope to view the liposomes.
He also believed the Sodium Ascorbate to far superior in absorbtion to AA.

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take some water,add some lecithin and liposomes are created.

Sonify to break them down to nano size.

The proof of encapsulation (Liposome) is in anyone who has made it with AA and performed the baking soda test.

Only question is are they below the required 200 nanometer size?

According to Brooks Bradly who viewed them with a scanning electron microscope they are.

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Both liposome and glyco-poly-L-lysine (G-PLL) are often used as carriers to deliver exogenous genes to the liver in gene therapy experiments.

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L-Carnatine, and Acytle-L-Carnatine. Is one of the main amino acids that helps facilitate the manufacture of GSH -- especially in combination with a-Lipoic Acid. Also Selenium.

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I use an ultrasonic cleaner, yes. I wore out the first one I used, a Harbor Freight (the low cost one most often mentioned for this use) and now have a slightly more expensive model CD-7810 (sold under several names, but same model number) that I am quite happy with so far. So far as I know, there is no other practical way to make small batches of liposomal Vitamin C (or liposomal glutathione) for personal use. One can buy the ready made, but (1) it's rather expensive and (2) they have to add preservatives to it to get a shelf life sufficient for retail trade.

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However, this same doctor thought up a liposomal vitamin C recipe that he thought would be superior to the soy or sunflower lecithin recipes. I'm going to try it. It probably won't be tasty, however. Here's his comment (note: FSO is "flax seed oil". I get unfiltered, refrigerated. If you want to leave that out, then adjust with equivalent amount of Omnicholine):

I recommended using phosphatidylcholine (Omnicholine), because it has a ratio of types of phosphatidylcholine that will contribute a much more powerful benefit to cell membranes (especially those in brain and immune cells) than lecithin. Two tablespoons of Omnicholine (about 10 caps) + 2 T FSO, 2 caps 400 IU vitamin E. Dissolve 5 grams of ascorbic acid in that.

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If you need to get results more quickly, I found you can take a low dose every hour using a kitchen timer. Then you can go on to 2-3 times a day dosing. I recommend taking a probiotic at least once a day, depending on the state of your gut flora. Do not take lipo C for 2 hours before and 2 hours after taking the probiotic.

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For a hangover - Taking 1,000mg daily in the week before a booze-up reduces stress on the liver. If you're drunk and want to look sober, a large dose of vitamin C will prevent drunken behaviour, according to a 1986 study, "Alcohol and Alcoholism".[/quote]

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I was involved in supplying the US National Weight Lifting Team with vitamin C in an internal study looking at how vitamin C affected cortisol. 1,000 mg of vitamin C reduced cortisol production by ~20%. It was concluded that vitamin C's antioxidant/anti-inflammatory effect rendered less need to produce cortisol, which is also an antioxidant. Thus, cortisol production by the body was decreased because the feedback loop that controls cortisol sensed less need for cortisol's antioxidant/anti-inflammatory effect.

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Dehydroascorbic acid has been used as a vitamin C dietary supplement.[8]

As a cosmetic ingredient, dehydroascorbic acid is used to enhance the appearance of the skin.[9] It may be used in a process for permanent waving of hair[10] and in a process for sunless tanning of skin.[11]

In a cell culture growth medium, dehydroascorbic acid has been used to assure the uptake of vitamin C into cell types that do not contain ascorbic acid transporters.[12]

As a pharmaceutical agent, some research has suggested that administration of dehydroascorbic acid may confer protection from neuronal injury following an ischemic stroke.[7] The literature contains many reports on the antiviral effects of vitamin C,[13] and one study suggests dehydroascorbic acid has stronger antiviral effects and a different mechanism of action than ascorbic acid.[14] Solutions in water containing ascorbic acid and copper ions and/or peroxide, resulting in rapid oxidation of ascorbic acid to dehydroascorbic acid, have been shown to possess powerful but short-lived antimicrobial, antifungal, and antiviral properties, and have been used to treat gingivitis, periodontal disease, and dental plaque.[15][16] A pharmaceutical product named Ascoxal is an example of such a solution used as a mouth rinse as an oral mucolytic and prophylactic agent against gingivitis.[16][17] Ascoxal solution has also been tested with positive results as a treatment for recurrent mucocutaneous herpes,[17] and as a mucolytic agent in acute and chronic pulmonary disease such as emphysema, bronchitis and asthma by aerosol inhalation.

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pjg - my notes - I've found so many interesting things. Like:

* You can get way more ascorbic acid dissolved into water if you ALSO add sodium bicarbonate. (Though I won't be doing this. I don't know that you can do this and still encapsulate it properly.)

* You can get way WAY more ascorbic acid dissolved into water if you put strong magnets on each side of the glass of water for 24-48 hours first. (Really. Mind blown. Must try.)

* If you combine hydrogen peroxide with ascorbic acid allegedly you get DHA.

* DHA crosses the BBB.

* This is also said for DMSO btw: http://www.pnas.org/content/98/20/11720 major helpful if you get a bunch into/on a person just after a stroke. Probably for the same reason, because they are such intense free radical cleanup agents.

notes to self

Dehydroascorbic acid
Molecular formula C6H6O6
Molar mass 174.11 g mol-1

Ascorbic acid
Molecular formula C6H8O6
Molar mass 176.12 g mol-1

Sodium Bicarbonate
Molecular formula NaHCO3
Molar mass 84.007 g mol-1

Hydrogen Peroxide
Molecular formula 2(HO) or (H2O2)
Molar mass 34.0147 g/mol

How to blow up your home lab: It creates volatile compounds when mixed with glucose and amino acids in 90 °C.

Ascorbic acid is special because it can transfer a single electron, owing to the stability of its own radical ion called "semidehydroascorbate", dehydroascorbate. The net reaction is:

RO • + C6H7O6- ? ROH + C6H6O6• -

The oxidized forms of ascorbate are relatively unreactive, and do not cause cellular damage.

So I think... h202 with asc acid would be the c6h706 which is then changed back with ROH but I'm trying to figure out the rest.

I wish I knew more about chemistry. I find it so fascinating.

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In 1959, the biochemist John J. Burns showed that scurvy resulted from the absence of the enzyme L-gulonolactone oxidase (GLO) in the human liver.[22] GLO is the last enzyme in the series of four used by the mammals to convert blood sugar (glucose) into ascorbic acid. In the absence of GLO, this important synthesis is halted, and the potential for scurvy plagues Homo sapiens.

A PERSONAL EXPERIENCE

A year after Burn's crucial discovery, my wife and I were involved in an accident that nearly cost us our lives. The accident was serendipitous in that it provided insights into human physiology in the scurvy-free condition.

The experiment began when a drunken driver crashed her car head-on into mine on a South Dakota highway. My wife and I were severely injured; no accident victim with injuries as severe as ours had survived at the hospital to which we were transported. The emergency room doctors and nurses did not expect me to survive the first night. They could not understand why my wife and I were conscious and lucid, and not in a state of deep shock from the trauma, severe bone injuries, and blood loss.

Since the 1930s we had been taking on a regular basis gradually increasing megadoses of ascorbate. By 1960 our dose was up to 5 to 10 g daily, or more if we were under heavy stress. One of the physiological effects of megadoses of ascorbate is the prevention of shock, the physiological response that kills the severely injured accident victims.

Our bodies were scurvy-free, and we tried to remain scurvy-free during our 2 3/4 month hospital stay by taking about 60 g of ascorbate daily. The hospital had never had patients like us before. From the start we began disproving all the medical prognostications based on scorbutic patients. Our physiology was more robust than that of the usual scorbutic hospital population. I healed so rapidly that I was able to walk out of the hospital on the broken legs that doctors had said could not bear my weight for at least a year. I have no doubt that without ascorbate, our lives would have ended on the night of the accident.

I also made the observation that patients entering a hospital do not necessarily die of the disease for which they entered. Scurvy is so rife in hospitals that it is probably involved in every hospital death. Subclinical scurvy is rampant not only among patients, but among doctors, nurses, and other individuals who limit their ascorbate intake to 60 mg daily. Tests on the urinary spillover of ascorbate establish the correctness of this observation.*

Four and a half months after the accident, I returned to work, convinced of the necessity of immediate publication of my work on the genetics of scurvy. I found out, the hard way, that it was much easier to conduct the research and write the paper that it was to have it published in an orthodox medical journal. I went through the routine of submitting the manuscript and having it rejected by six medical journals before it was finally published in 1966.[1]

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Vitamin C May Offer Potential Life-Saving Treatment for Sepsis
Nov. 18, 2010 — Physicians caring for patients with sepsis may soon have a new safe and cost-effective treatment for this life-threatening illness. Research led by Dr. Karel Tyml and his colleagues at The University of Western Ontario and Lawson Health Research Institute have found that vitamin C can not only prevent the onset of sepsis, but can reverse the disease.

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DHA competes with glucose for transport into cells, and so the amount of DHA that is absorbed depends on the concentration of glucose in the blood. This may cause a person who consumes so much sugar that he or she has too much glucose in the blood to have cellular deficiency of vitamin C, at least in terms of supplying the mitochondria with vitamin C.

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Today's reading was a little more on lipospheric encapsulation and then on the effect of magnetics on liquids such as water and iodine.

You can do your own experiment using strong neodymium magnets on water and watering something that grows super fast and measurably like bean sprouts. One repeated experiment that was describe online found the following, using 4 magnets to surround a tube/jar of water which then watered the sprouts:

SSSS had the fastest and highest growth but the stalks were not strong enough to support it. (leggy, in the words of seedling gardeners.)

NNNN had the slowest growth and was shorter but the stalks were very strong.

NSNS and NNSS configuration of magnets as well as a blend of separate waters from NNNN and SSSS magnets, all had about the same speed and height of growth with strong enough stalks. The NNSS was just slightly taller.

What was never made clear was whether this was their direction on the band they used -- meaning half would be facing the opposite direction when the band was wrapped around a tube! -- or what.

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pjg - There was an account I think I posted a year or two ago from a doc who had treated a man (Canadian) who turned out to be a POW survivor. He went on to treat a bunch of POWs both in Canada and in the USA. They had been so profoundly deficient for 1+++ years. The man he first met was so messed up from arthiritis and more, he couldn't lift his arms above his head, was in chronic terrible pain, and more. With megadosing of vitamin B3 (Niacin) he actually completely resolved. The doc wrote, about treating the POWs:

Quote: There is an important lesson from the experiences of these veterans and their response to megadoses of nicotinic acid. This is that every human exposed to severe stress and malnutrition for a long enough period of time will develop a permanent need for large amounts of this vitamin and perhaps for several others.

pjg - I think it is probably the case that many of who have been malnutritioned most of our lives probably need a vastly larger amount more of many basic nutrients than someone who hasn't had that experience -- and even moreso if the person in question is very large.

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The Hickey/Roberts Dynamic Flow theory predicts that taking vitamin C every four hours will produce the highest sustained blood concentrations. Take more before bedtime.

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Linus Pauling specifically recommended high, generally equal oral doses of vitamin C and the amino acid lysine between 5,000 and 6,000 mg in his Unified Theory lecture (available on video). Anything less, by definition, is not the Linus Pauling Therapy.

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Note that proline is also added by matthius rath I think his name is, now, who worked with Pauling

pjg - This is the amino breakdown from my beef kosher collagen hydrolysate. But it does seem that it has the sorts of proteins desired.

Quote: (averages) AMINO ACID PROFILE % (GMS / 100 GMS PROTEIN)
Glycine 29.0
Proline 17.6
Hydroxyproline 14.5
Glutamic Acid 11.4
Alanine 11.0
Arginine 9.3
Aspartic Acid 6.7
Lysine 4.7
Serine 3.8
Leucine 3.4
Valine 3.3
Phenylanlanine 2.6
Threonine 2.2
Isoleucine 1.8
Hydroxylysine 1.2
Histidine 1.0
Methionine 1.0
Tyrosine 1.0
Cystine 0.1
Tryptophane 0

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Sugar (all forms) depresses vitamin C stores. The highest concentration of Vitamin C in the body is in the adrenal glands, and chronic vitamin C deficiency leads to adrenal exhaustion.

With prolonged adrenal deficiency, there is a deficiency of endogenous (body-produced) cortisone. Rheumatoid arthritis is the end result of this prolonged attack of sugar on the adrenal glands.

Note: Dr. Reams said sugar is converted to alcohols by the liver and drives calciums out of the liver and that this is its major damage. pjg

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Oh look. So what Klenner documented and even published between the 40s and the 70s -- that along with nearly every other deadly illness, ascorbic acid CURES tuberculosis -- was just "discovered" although only in vitro so far.

http://business.inquirer.net/123081/accidental-find-shows-vitamin-c-kills-tuberculosis/
12:06 am | Wednesday, May 22nd, 2013 PARIS -
Scientists said Tuesday they had managed to kill lab-grown tuberculosis (TB) bacteria with good old Vitamin C - an "unexpected" discovery they hope will lead to better, cheaper drugs.

Imagine if scientists actually caught up with science. - pjg

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from a research study my friend quoted: Ascorbic acid inhibited the growth of pathogenic intestinal flora and reduced the pathogenic and relatively pathogenic bacteria count in the gastrointestinal tract and notably contributed to enhanced growth of beneficial bacteria.

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Swallowing vitamin C will increase levels of the super-antioxidant, glutathione, in our blood by almost 50%.

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This is interesting. Discussing ascorbic acid made into a paste with water (or occasionally dissolved in dmso) and used on cancerous skin lesions. Plenty of success stories including biopsy followups.

Quote: As far as the "when to stop" question, that's a big question mark around here for almost all treatments. Lots of varying opinions. One thing you might use the search function for are the posts by Dan, the founder of this forum, on the topic of "orange oil." It has some good reports as a treatment but, even more interesting, it seems to act as a reliable indicator for the presence of BCC. You can put orange oil on a gaping cut or other skin abrasion and you won't feel a thing. Apply a few drops anywhere there are abnormal cells like basal cell skin cancer, however, and after a few minutes you feel a noticeable stinging that lasts about 20 minutes. It penetrates very deep, too. Therefore it might be used as a tool after treatment to determine if you've wiped out all the BCC. Theoretically, no sting = no cancer. This may or may not be 100% and no scientific tests that I'm aware of have ever been done to confirm this. (I'm sure a dermatologist would boot you out of the office for even asking about it!) So do your own research + draw your own conclusions. As for me, if I don't feel any sting response with orange oil after a course of treatment using Vitamin C or petty spurge, I'm inclined to say "finished" and just let it heal up. You can always hit it again if it recurs. Orange oil is available at health food stores or at places like Whole Foods Market in little bottles for about $3.00. I think Dan mentions some other sources or commercial products that contain it, too.

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Comments on a forum about Lipospheric C

* I've been taking this since last summer. I don't ever want to stop taking this. It has changed my life. I'm 51 and have more energy and have not been sick one day since taking it.

* I'm a Woman, 62 years old. No diagnosis of any serious disease. At my ideal weight, with the help of L-C at the beginning. Over the past year, not one single cold, flu, illness going around my community, has in any way afflicted me. It's like it made me invisible to germs or whatever it was that made other people sick. Another quirk of taking L-C has been something I could judge over a longer period of time, so now the report on it. My hair I have always worn long, usually to the middle of my back, so I know how long it takes to grow over time. My hair growth has jumped into overtime mode this past year. What used to take 4 months to grow in length now takes about 2 months. I just cut off another 5 inches last week, as it was down to my butt, and I didn't know how that happened so darn fast! Plus, it's much much thicker too. As a side note, nails are in fast grow mode and nice and healthy, I find myself needing to file and trim them much more often.

* For the record, this concoction tastes pretty gross and has a very long aftertaste. I'd plan on having something to wash it down with or mix it with something else. But my wife is feeling better, so apparently it works.

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Because of its ability to strengthen collagen, vitamin C may also help prevent brain hemorrhages, especially in newborns and the elderly. I have always thought that vitamin C should be administered to patients with cerebralaneurysms (ballooning of a blood vessel in thebrain) to strengthen their vessels and prevent further aneurysms.

Collagen is also important for the formation of the lining (myelin sheath) around nerves. Studies on the effect of vitamin C on myelin demonstrate that high doses stimulate myelin formation and differentiation of schwann cells, which protect the neurons of the peripheral nervous system. This may explain why some multiple sclerosis patients who are treated with high-dose intravenous vitamin C experience dramatic improvements.

The vitamin C level in the brain is four times higher than the blood, and during times of vitamin C deficiency, the brain holds onto its vitamin C very tightly. Both of these facts underscore how important this nutrient is to the health and functioning of the brain. In fact, in certain areas of the brain that have particularly high activity — such as the hippocampus, the hypothalamus, and the striatum — levels of vitamin C are very high.

Interestingly, vitamin C has been shown to enhance maturation of the synapse (the connection between two brain cells), which is something not done by other antioxidants. This all means that vitamin C is important to how the brain forms and develops. Because of the high level of vitamin C in the substantia nigra (a midbrain structure that controls movement, among other things) and striatum (part of the basal ganglia, which also governs movement), it may be that vitamin C is involved in Parkinson’s disease. Vitamin C is also an inhibitor of the enzyme that destroys acetylcholine (acetylcholinesterase) and therefore may also play a role in Alzheimer’s disease. The brains of people with Alzheimer’s have deficient levels of vitamin C. Vitamin C has been shown to reverse certain types of memory loss in mouse models of Alzheimer’s dementia.

Lecithin and Vitamin C work hand in hand. They are very good partners.

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I may add to these notes at times. - PJ

Constant caveat: I am not a scientist. For "real science" you should read articles by people with academic credentials, of which I have none.