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  1. #1
    kojak_x's Avatar
    kojak_x is offline Associate Member
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    Cortisol Levels and Vitaman C

    It is said that vitamin C will help with cortisol. Now is there any scientific research on this that anyone could point out. I know some people say it will help but I also know there is alot of bullshit floating around on the internet.
    I personally can't find anything on Vitamen C related to reducing cortisol levels in the body.

    Any opinions or help would be great.

  2. #2
    johnnyrv is offline Associate Member
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    vitamin c increases testosterone that may reduce cortisol levels

  3. #3
    elpropiotorvic's Avatar
    elpropiotorvic is offline Senior Member
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    sleep is the best medicine for cortisol...sex helps (NOT JOKING)

  4. #4
    Merc. is offline Banned
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    This is a bit older ( I just happened to have it saved ) .. I have NOT researched any of my medical databases . This is a article from psychology today that referenced some studies ..

    The otc supplement Phosphatidylserine ( PS) .. works very well at lowering cortisol ( one of the best at it acually) .. Anyways check out this article ....




    Vitamin C: Stress Buster A study finds in addition to benefits related to the common cold and cancer, vitamin C helps reduce both the physical and psychological effects of stress on people.
    By PT Staff - last reviewed on January 24, 2007


    It's already everybody's favorite nutritional supplement, linked, however controversially, to preventing the common cold and fighting cancer. But vitamin C recently added a new notch on its belt. The vitamin helps reduce both the physical and psychological effects of stress on people.

    People who have high levels of vitamin C do not show the expected mental and physical signs of stress when subjected to acute psychological challenges. What's more, they bounce back from stressful situations faster than people with low levels of vitamin C in their blood.

    In one study German researchers subjected 120 people to a sure-fire stressor—a public speaking task combined with math problems. Half of those studied were given 1,000 mg of vitamin C. Such signs of stress as elevated levels of the stress hormone cortisol and high blood pressure were significantly greater in those who did not get the vitamin supplement. Those who got vitamin C reported that they felt less stressed when they got the vitamin.


    The researchers believe that vitamin C should be considered an essential part of stress management.

    Earlier studies showed that vitamin C abolished secretion of cortisol in animals that had been subjected to repeated stress. Cortisol is a hormone released by the adrenal glands in response to stress. Once it gets into the bloodstream, it is responsible for relaying the news of stress to all parts of the body and mind.

    Cortisol is the hormone, for example, that triggers the "fight or flight" response to stress. That allows us to spring into action when we sense danger. But like many emergency-alert systems, the stress response comes at a considerable cost. Among other effects, frequent exposure to high levels of stress hormones exhausts the body's physical resources, impairs learning and memory, and makes people susceptible to depression.

    In the animal studies, vitamin C fed to rats undergoing stress not only prevented the expected increase in cortisol levels, it prevented the animals from exhibiting the known signs of physical and emotional stress, including loss of body weight. Animals that did not receive vitamin C had three times the level of stress hormones.

    The present RDA for vitamin C for adults is 60 milligrams—a far cry from the 1,000 mg found helpful in the stress study. But there's a growing belief that the RDA for vitamin C is vastly outdated. The current RDA was set decades ago and is based on the amount of the vitamin needed to ward off scurvy.

    Current thinking looks at vitamin C from the opposite direction: The amount needed to promote health under varying environmental conditions. That appears to be a lot greater than the amount needed to prevent deficiencies.

    There's also evidence suggesting that prehistoric humans consumed large amounts of vitamin C in a tropical diet rich in fresh fruits. If so, the physiological constitution we have inherited may require far larger daily doses of vitamin C than the current RDA, perhaps as high as 1,000 mg.

    Vitamin C is present in fresh, uncooked fruits and vegetables, especially citrus fruits and red and green peppers. One eight-ounce glass of fresh orange juice provides 97 milligrams of the vitamin.

    It's also found in papayas, cantaloupes, strawberries, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, tomatoes, asparagus and parsley. There's no vitamin C in animal food, and a small amount in raw fish.

    An unstable substance, vitamin C is destroyed by cooking and exposure to light.

    The most commonly consumed nutrient supplement, vitamin C comes in many formulations, but the best may be a time-released preparation that works over the course of a day, as the vitamin works rapidly and is short-acting. Alternatively, vitamin C supplements can be taken at intervals throughout the day.



    Merc.
    Last edited by Merc.; 10-21-2009 at 08:21 PM.

  5. #5
    love2liftiron's Avatar
    love2liftiron is offline Junior Member
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    i always take at least 1500mg/day of vit c......what your body dont use will be pee'd out anyway....

  6. #6
    johnnyrv is offline Associate Member
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    isnt vitamn c water souluble,or is it fat?

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