Up Your Energy: IV Vitamin C Therapy

BOOK AN APPOINTMENT
pic-of-echinacea

Up Your Energy: IV Vitamin C Therapy

A recent study shows that high-dose vitamin C IV therapy may help to decrease Epstein-Barr virus in people with chronic fatigue.

Naturopathic and integrative physicians are increasingly using high-dose intravenous (IV) vitamin C to treat a number of medical conditions, such as chronic fatigue. In a recent study published in Medical Science Monitor, vitamin C IV therapy was shown to benefit patients with high levels of antibodies to the Epstein-Barr virus, most of whom had chronic fatigue syndrome.

Epstein Barr virus causes fatigue

Epstein-Barr virus is a herpes virus responsible for infectious mononucleosis, a viral infection infamous for causing chronic fatigue and, in some cases, for causing long-term suffering with chronic fatigue syndrome. While there are a number of underlying causes of chronic fatigue syndrome, in a subset of patients the disease starts with infectious mononucleosis. Studies suggest that these patients have an impaired immune response to the Eptsein-Barr viral infection.

Vitamin C levels are commonly low

Nearly 25% of US adults have below-adequate vitamin C blood levels and 6% of the adult population is classified as having a vitamin C deficiency. The true number of people with poor vitamin C status is likely even higher, given that early symptoms of vitamin C deficiency are vague. Early vitamin C deficiency symptoms include fatigue, malaise, and depression and may manifest as a reduced desire to be physically active.

Vitamin C IV therapy decreases Epstein-Barr antibodies

The recent study was one of the first clinical studies to examine the effects of vitamin C IV therapy on infection with Epstein-Barr virus. The researchers evaluated data from 35 men and women diagnosed with chronic fatigue or other conditions who had Epstein-Barr virus antibodies measured before and after treatment with IV vitamin C.

Almost all of the 35 subjects showed improvement and all had lower levels of antibodies to the Epstein-Barr virus following IV vitamin C treatment. For example, levels of IgG antibodies to the virus’s early diffuse antigen (EBV EA IgG) decreased on average by almost a half. The more sessions of vitamin C IV therapy the patients had, the greater their decline in EBV EA IgG levels. Those who had five or more sessions had a significantly greater percent decrease in antibodies over time in comparison with infected people who did not receive intravenous vitamin C.

The researchers also discovered that those who had higher blood levels of vitamin C before the start of treatment had lower antibody levels before treatment was initiated, indicating that vitamin C may have been helping control the viral infection all along. Furthermore, they found evidence that the patients with greater infection burdens may have been more significantly vitamin-C depleted and seemed to require more of the vitamin to replenish their tissue levels.

More ways to use vitamin C and other supplements to treat fatigue

The researchers recommended further studies on the effects of vitamin C IV therapy as well as vitamin D and antioxidant therapies in patients with Epstein-Barr infections. For more information on Epstein-Barr and other infectious agents as underlying causes of chronic fatigue, see the comprehensive collection of information on treating fatigue in the Natural Health Advisory Library,here.

In this collection, you will also find more information on how vitamin C can be taken orally as a supplement along with other supplements to increase energy levels. You don’t need to feel tired all the time. Natural treatments are available that you can start using now.

Resources:

[1] Med Sci Monit. 2014; 20: 725–732.

[2] PLoS One. 2014 Jan 15;9(1):e85387.

[3] FASEB J. 2014 Apr28(1):supp 828.3.