liposomal vitamin c side effects

liposomal vitamin c side effects

liposomal vitamin c serum

Liposomal Vitamin C Side Effects

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What does vitamin C accomplish? Vitamin C is a very powerful antioxidant. Many diseases are based on 'oxidative stress' which vitamin C can relieve by neutralizing free radicals present. Vitamin C has an anti-toxic effect in poisoning of any kind, from insect bites to snake venoms, but secondary bacterial and viral poisoning, too, can be successfully treated. It can also be used in sepsis ('blood poisoning'), or whenever side effects of chemical drugs such as ones used in chemotherapy tax the body. Vitamin C is also successfully used in heavy metal intoxication. There is probably no known virus that cannot be successfully fought by vitamin C—in stark contrast to what is known in conventional medicine. Even severe life-threatening mushroom poisoning can be neutralized with vitamin C, provided that immediate intravenous administration is given. In cases of poisoning which does not require immediate and life-sustaining treatment, high doses of liposomal vitamin C can be used.




What are the limits of vitamin C? For example, if poisoning has led to irreparable tissue damage, vitamin C cannot heal it. Vitamin C as a cure for cancer? For quite some time now, vitamin C in high doses has been used in alternative cancer therapies. It has been found that most cancer cells are very sensitive to vitamin C, and regress. A previously known reason for that is that vitamin C is similar in structure to glucose (sugar). Since cancer cells are very sugar-loving and need sugar for development and proliferation, vitamin C is taken up by them. What exactly happens there? High doses of vitamin C, in conjunction with iron in the blood, turns into hydrogen peroxide, which in turn produces oxygen. Because the cancer cells can exist only in an anaerobic environment (deprived of oxygen), the oxygen produced is toxic to these cells, causing them to die. To all the healthy cells, the oxygen produced is harmless. Liposomal and intravenous vitamin C in SLE Lupus




You'll find a report on the Testimonials page in which a patient with SLE (Lupus) explains how she treated herself successfully with liposomal and intravenous vitamin C. Is to be noted that it is likely a virus (EBV) that caused the disease and eventually succumbed to the vitamin. This report also shows that vitamin C can successfully fight poisoning, regardless if it was caused by drugs or by bacteria. Nowadays, liposomal vitamin C achieves a saturation in the blood that formerly seemed possible only with intravenous administration. However, the latter has its drawbacks. With every infusion there is the risk of infection. Furthermore, it is not easy and possible for anyone to undergo such a procedure. In addition, an appropriate physician or therapist has to be found willing to administer an infusion. In case a patient does not want to go to all the trouble, liposomal vitamin C is a viable alternative. It can easily be taken at home or at work, thus ensuring the necessary saturation in the blood, which could never be achieved with conventional doses (tablets, capsules or liquids).




The liposome produced with nanotechnology, which we have on offer is very well absorbed by the body, since the lipid used has the same structure as the cell walls. This image sequence illustrates the life of a liposome from its creation to its fulfillment of purpose. Click on the image to start. Dosage of liposomal vitamin C 1 - 2 g according to severity: 3 - 6 g according to severity and jeopardy: 6 - 12 g (Warning: heavy metal intoxications: Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction) according to severity and stage: 8 - 20 g Combination with intravenous administration of vitamin C Combination with a helpful diet of raw vegetables and vegetable juices according to Gerson. Intake of alpha-lipoic acid, possibly vitamin B17, magnesium, selenium, and Q10 is recommended.April 11, 2014 by While still very new in its use in clinical medicine, liposome science began in the mid-1960s, and the following 40 years saw research into this area grow significantly.




Much of the research has focused on modifying liposomes in various ways in order than they might selectively end up where a cancer is located, and their chemotherapy contents can then be selectively released in the hopes of killing the cancer while sparing the rest of the body from the toxicity of the chemotherapy. To date, liposomes are still not being used very much in this attempt to refine cancer chemotherapy and lessen its associated toxicity. What has become much more available over the last decade or so has been unmodified liposomes that deliver to all cells their encapsulated nutrients such as vitamin C, glutathione, B-vitamins, alpha lipoic acid, vitamin D, and other commonly supplemented vitamins or nutrients. While many people are now realizing supplemental benefits they never saw before because of the availability of orally administered liposome products, very many people are also depriving themselves of these benefits due to a lack of understanding of the science or the quality of the products they are taking.




LivOn Laboratories, Inc. has been the groundbreaker in making liposome-encapsulated nutrients available to the public. I became a consultant to this company about 10 years ago, almost a year after they provided me with some product to try out. I "indulged" them by receiving the product, tossed it into the closet, and didn't think much more about it, until I got sick a few months later. At that time, I had absolutely no idea what a liposome was, and I had no intention of taking the time to learn. Then the flu hit me, as hard as I had ever been hit. I had recently closed my clinic, and I no longer had the availability of the intravenous vitamin C upon which I had relied for so long. So, I took vitamin C powder until the diarrhea was continuous. And then I remembered the liposome product. The only thing that stuck in my mind was that I was told it did not have the bowel/diarrhea effect of high doses of regular vitamin C. So, I figured that was going to be the only way to get more vitamin C "on board," which I knew was what I needed.




I took about five or six grams of the liposome product all at once in juice. Within 45 minutes to an hour, I was having a difficult time remembering how sick I had felt, as I was starting to feel so good. I took more packets, and I overcame a bad cold/flu more rapidly than I ever had before, even with multiple infusions of 50 to 100 grams of intravenous vitamin C over several days. I then took the most scientific approach that could be taken: I ignored it. It was only after 8 to 12 months that the same scenario, more or less, repeated itself, once again with me, and a few times with family/friends. I then decided it was time to figure out what liposomes were all about. Better late than never – right? Circulating widely on the Internet these days is the concept that a small dose of liposome-encapsulated vitamin C is more effective than a larger dose of vitamin C given intravenously. This concept has come from the personal clinical observations that I have just presented.




My clinical opinion is that one gram of properly-produced and orally-ingested liposome-encapsulated vitamin C is as or more effective than 5 to 10 grams of vitamin C given intravenously, for an acute viral syndrome. When someone is ill, my advice is still to use as many forms of vitamin C as available, and dosed as highly as is feasible. I discussed this "Multi-C Protocol" in another article. If the reader thinks I will say anything to help LivOn and hurt the competition, then there is not much point in reading further. If someone wants to be cynical about my intentions, that's their right, however misguided they might be. All I can say is that the simple ultrasonic treatment of lecithin and vitamin C does not make liposomes. I have reviewed the sophisticated testing of two different such preparations. Both of them: zero liposomes. However, the ultrasonic treatment does results in a legitimate emulsion, which is absorbed much better than just regular vitamin C. However, that is just absorption into the blood, not enhanced uptake inside the cells, as with liposomes.




So, such a preparation can certainly help the sick patient, and probably more effectively than just regular vitamin C can help. It is important to realize, however, that the critically ill patient who continues to worsen while taking a homemade preparation has not yet had the benefit of liposome enhanced vitamin C uptake into cells, only the self-imposed illusion/delusion of that benefit. The enhanced intracellular uptake of the vitamin C, a critical unique aspect of a good liposome supplement, never occurs with the homemade preparation. Some other companies make real liposome preparations, some do not. I am only in a position to say that LivOn does. The clinical effects that I have witnessed over years now continue to amaze me. Of note, a liposome preparation also does not come in a dry capsule, however, convenient this may be to take versus a thick, oily preparation. Repeated attempts have been made to compare the impact of liposome-encapsulated nutrients, like vitamin C, with their un-encapsulated counterparts in the blood levels achieved after taking a given dose.




For the properly encapsulated liposome preparation, such a comparison is completely irrelevant to what is happening inside the body. Liposomes predominately get taken up by the lymphatic system in the gut, not the portal circulation. There is no significant "one-pass" liver metabolism that takes place with a quality liposome preparation. On the other hand, the liposomes, especially in the case of those containing vitamin C, rapidly load up the immune cells in the lymphatics of the gut, achieving high intracellular levels of this nutrient. Colloquially speaking, one could say this "supercharges" the immune system cells. The amount of liposome-encapsulated vitamin C that eventually reaches the bloodstream via the thoracic duct is already lessened in amount by this immune cell loading, and what finally reaches the blood quickly gets taken up inside other cells throughout the body. Relative to un-encapsulated, regular vitamin C in the blood, little encapsulated vitamin C gets excreted via the urine.




So, a blood level of one versus the other really gives little meaningful information in comparing potential clinical impact, or in comparing how much vitamin C is actually reaching where it needs to go. When a liposome vitamin C "blood level" declines, it means it's leaving the blood and entering cells, not being excreted by the body. For a long time now, intravenous 'anything' has been considered the "gold standard" and the optimal way to give any medicine/nutrient/mineral/vitamin to the body. This is now no longer always the case. Liposomes that are produced in a high concentration of a tiny enough size (not an inexpensive and easy process, unfortunately), with high quality ingredients (highly refined and costly phosphatidylcholine versus just lecithin) will continue to revolutionize medicine in the years to come. However, it is best to regard quality liposome products as an additional component to your healing protocol. It needn't replace anything, but it can augment everything.




June 22, 2013 | Liposome-Encapsulated GlutathioneJuly 9, 2013 | Root canals are a primary cause of chronic diseaseJune 27, 2013 | Calcium, the Toxic SupplementJuly 28, 2013 | Vitamin C With VaccinationsAugust 3, 2013 | Avoiding Digestive ToxicityAugust 10, 2013 | The disease causing dangers of high iron levelsAugust 19, 2013 | Vitamin C better than chemotherapySeptember 2, 2013 | The marketing myth of ’vitamin C complex’September 18, 2013 | Cardiologist speaks truth about cholesterol and statinsOctober 2, 2013 | Reverse shingles with vitamin COctober 14, 2013 | The effective prevention and treatment of radiation exposureOctober 29, 2013 | Undiagnosed scurvy causes widespread diseaseNovember 19, 2013 | Eliminate lead toxicity by consuming vitamin CNovember 29, 2013 | New study says high fat diet is healthyJanuary 1, 2014 | Osteoporosis is much more than calcium deficiencyFebruary 21, 2014 | Vitamin C is the 'muscle' of the immune systemMarch 11, 2014 | Reversing disease with the 'multi-C' protocolApril 6, 2014 |

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