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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Natural Remedies / Is Your Vitamin C Real or Synthetic?

Is Your Vitamin C Real or Synthetic?

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Three Studies Suggest Caution with High Dose Ascorbic Acid
  • Fan of Linus Pauling? Consider This…
  • What about High Dose, Intravenous Ascorbic Acid?
  • Whole Food Vitamin C is Naturally Low Dose
  • Ascorbic Acid is Usually from Genetically Modified Corn
  • What to Look for in a True Vitamin C Product

natural vitamin C vs ascorbic acid

Did you know that ascorbic acid is actually synthetic vitamin C? What’s more, it is usually GMO vitamin C, which means it was derived from GMO corn.

If you are learning this for the first time, it can be a rather shocking realization as almost all vitamin C supplements on the market use isolated ascorbic acid separated from a whole food source. The manufacturing process that produces synthetically derived vitamin C leaves all the beneficial co-factors behind!

Even more disturbing, ascorbic acid is frequently marketed as natural vitamin C and added to organic foods as a natural preservative. Truly natural forms of vitamin C and synthetic ascorbic acid seem to be used interchangeably.

How confusing for the consumer!

Nearly all juices and fruit products are loaded up with ascorbic acid, even many organic, healthfood store versions. It seems that if a product is labeled “high in Vitamin C”, consumers buy more of it.

A lot of folks are being fooled by these misleading semantics. There is a growing body of evidence that those consuming high doses of ascorbic acid should have reason to worry.

Three Studies Suggest Caution with High Dose Ascorbic Acid

The journal Wise Traditions cites three studies that give pause about large doses of vitamin C. The first, from the Jun 15, 2001 issue of Science, showed that “synthetic vitamin C may contribute to the formation of genotoxins that can lead to cancer”.

A second study presented to the American Heart Association showed a link between consumption of only 500 mg of vitamin C per day and a greater propensity toward thickening of the arteries (Los Angeles Times, March 3, 2000).

More recently, athletes taking 1000 mg of isolated ascorbic acid per day showed reduced endurance capacity from interference with antioxidant enzymes (American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Jan 2008).

This information should give pause to anyone who is actively taking synthetic vitamin C supplements such as those Emergen-C packets that are available everywhere, from pharmacies and health food stores to even gas stations!

Supplements like these are NOT boosting immunity and are NOT good for you!

Synthetic vitamins such as ascorbic acid act more like drugs in the body rather than whole food nutrients with all the available co-factors. Taking any synthetic vitamin can cause imbalances in the body and should be avoided.

Another worrisome and popular trend is the recommendation of some alternative health professionals to do a “vitamin C flush” during illness. This therapy (if you can call it that) calls for large doses of ascorbic acid until the onset of diarrhea.

This approach to regaining wellness has never made any sense to me. Now, with more studies indicating the danger of high doses of vitamin C, caution seems well-founded.

Fan of Linus Pauling? Consider This…

If you are a fan of Linus Pauling who popularized the notion of huge doses of Vitamin C for the common cold in the 1970s, consider this. GMO Vitamin C did not exist when Pauling was conducting his studies. GMO derived Vitamin C is what most people are unwittingly taking today!

What’s more, the studies indicating the danger of high doses of vitamin C over long periods of time had not been done yet. They were conducted long after Pauling died in 1994.

What about High Dose, Intravenous Ascorbic Acid?

What about high dose, intravenous ascorbic acid for the very ill? Note that vitamin C for IV use is almost always derived from GMO corn as well as being extremely high dose and synthetic ascorbic acid only.

Under certain circumstances and for the very ill, high dose GMO ascorbic acid therapy can be beneficial. For example, my husband used IV ascorbic acid therapy immediately after each amalgam removal. This prevented any released mercury from getting stored in the tissues. Not doing this risks the development of autoimmune disease.

However, synthetic vitamin C especially when genetically modified shouldn’t be a regular feature in anyone’s diet or supplement regimen.

synthetic vitamin c

Whole Food Vitamin C is Naturally Low Dose

The best way to get vitamin C on a daily basis is from whole foods sources. This will provide you this critical nutrient at a low dosage that will do no harm over the long term.

When you get the whole foods version of vitamin C, you don’t need much at all. A truly natural vitamin C supplement with no isolated ascorbic acid is naturally low-dose and yet highly effective.

Don’t forget about the benefits of fresh grassfed milk – a great source of vitamin C. The vitamin C in milk is mostly destroyed by pasteurization, along with many other nutrients. This is why buying fresh and local is so important.

Fresh and lacto-fermented fruits and vegetables (such as traditional sauerkraut) are other excellent sources of the whole vitamin C complex.

Perhaps folks feel the need to take large doses of synthetic vitamin C because all the processed foods they are eating are so devoid of the nutrient in its whole form. Switching to whole foods and dumping those vitamin C supplements in the trash would be a much better approach to boosting immunity!

Ascorbic Acid is Usually from Genetically Modified Corn

What’s worse is that ascorbic acid is not just synthetic. Remember that it is also usually derived from genetically modified corn! More on that GMO vitamin C travesty fooling millions of consumers every single day in the linked article.

Another vitamin scam harming consumers concerns synthetic folate commercially known as folic acid.

The pushing of beta carotene as true vitamin A by food manufacturers and supplement companies is another nutritional falsehood scamming millions of consumers and worse, seriously harming their health.

natural vitamin C brands

What to Look for in a True Vitamin C Product

To give you some idea of what to look for in a vitamin C supplement, here are the ingredients of the one I use. Notice that there is no isolated ascorbic acid or other ascorbates and no additives.  Just pure food Vitamin C sources. Please note that this is not the only Vitamin C supplement that qualifies as totally pure. There are a few others.

Pure Radiance C ingredients: camu camu berry extract, manioc root, acerola berry extract, amla berry extract, buckwheat sprouts, freeze-dried berry blend, blueberry, raspberry, cranberry, cherry, rose hips fruit, lemon peel, black pepper berry extract.

I also use the Amla C Plus. Here are the ingredients: Organic Amla berry, organic spirulina.

Notice that the words “ascorbic acid” are not listed in either of these products!

Want to know where to find a complete line of whole food Vitamin C supplements from a variety of whole food plant sources?

Click here for several carefully vetted brands to choose from.

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Category: Natural Remedies
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (279)

  1. Lol

    Jan 16, 2014 at 2:41 pm

    God, how uneducated can people be..

    Reply
  2. SOPHIE

    Jan 2, 2014 at 4:40 am

    I was going to take Milk Thistle to help my liver but I noticed on the label that it contains Ascorbic Acid so I discontinued it. Disapointed because I wanted to clean my liver and hoped to get rid of liver spots and moles on my face and body. I know I should be eating whole foods but I wanted to supplement it as well.

    Reply
    • Dr. B

      Feb 11, 2014 at 8:32 pm

      I suggest you refrain from following this blogger and seek the advice of a qualified integrative medicine doctor who specializes in functional medicine…

      Yes please take the milk thistle, better if you tincture a brew out of it even.

  3. Rj

    Dec 9, 2013 at 10:23 am

    Are you not interchanging real vit c with synthetic when you say that the vit c flush is not good or causes kidney stones or is it just that Vit c promotes aluminum absorption which is bad if you have kidney issues. It really makes me Furious beyond all reason that false advertising is supported and even promoted by our fed gov along with the false security they promote by outlawing natural resources.

    Reply
  4. collen

    Dec 8, 2013 at 12:35 pm

    I have always heard that sodium ascorbate was a much better and absorbent form of vitamin c – is it also artificial?

    Reply
  5. Kristie

    Nov 21, 2013 at 9:07 pm

    What about rose hips? Is a rose hip infusion an adequate source of vitamin c?

    Reply
  6. Chris

    Nov 18, 2013 at 7:45 pm

    In “The Healing Factor Vitamin C Against Disease” Irwin Stone explained very well why do we need to take vitamin C.
    http://vitamincfoundation.org/stone/

    Reply
  7. karen

    Nov 7, 2013 at 1:52 pm

    SsssYou are absolutely right! Doctor or not. All vitamin isolates such as ascorbic acid are artificially produced. Please refer your readers to a web site http://www.the doctor within. It tells people the truth as written by ROYAL LEE. ALSO,vitamins should be from organic sources. There are too many genetically modified foods.

    Reply
  8. JohnnyWhite

    Nov 7, 2013 at 11:20 am

    No one mentioned the raw milk. For many peep that’s worse than ascorbate forms of ascorbic acid. There are, BTW, non GMO ascorbates available. and for alternative views on C look up Tom Levy, or Russell Jaffe on Youtube. They talk about therapeutic use, not necessarily daily use of C. For another natural C Paradise Herbs sells a good one (low dose). Live long and prosper \ //

    Reply
  9. Peter

    Oct 25, 2013 at 9:33 am

    Hi there.

    I’m currently searching for a reliable source of Vitamin C for industrial use.
    I found the company McBoeck http://www.mcboeck.com , but never heard about them before.
    Does anyone know this company? As far as I know they are specialized in Ascorbic Acid and its salts.

    Reply
  10. ортомол витамины витрум пренатал

    Oct 17, 2013 at 11:46 am

    витамины в рыбе

    Reply
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