High Dose Intravenous Vitamin C and Influenza: A Case Report

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OPEN ACCESS VOLUME 33, NUMBER 3 PUBLISHED: JUNE 2018 REVIEW ARTICLE CASE REPORT

High Dose Intravenous Vitamin C and Influenza: A Case Report

Michael J Gonzalez, DSc, NMD, PhD, FANMA, FACN¹; Miguel J Berdiel, MD²; Jorge Duconge, PhD³; Thomas E Levy, MD, JD4; Ines M Alfaro, MD5; Raul Morales-Borges, MD6; Victor Marcial-Vega, MD7; Jose Olalde, BEE, MEE8 1.University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus, School of Public Health, San Juan PR; 2.Berdiel Clinic, Ponce, PR; 3.University of Puerto Rico Medical Sciences Campus, School of Pharmacy, San Juan PR; 4.Riordan Clinic, Wichita KS; 5.Alpha Institute of Preventive Care,Caguas, PR; 6.Integrative Optimal Health of Puerto Rico, San Juan PR; 7.Universidad Central del Caribe School of Medicine, San Juan PR; 8.Centro Medico Adaptogeno (CMA), Bayamon PR.

Introduction

recognized for treating influenza, or viral diseases in general.

Influenza, commonly known as “the flu”, is an infectious disease caused by an influenza virus. Symptoms can be mild to severe. The most common symptoms include: a high fever, runny nose, sore throat, muscle pains, headache, coughing, and feeling tired. These symptoms typically begin two days after exposure to the virus and last about a week. The cough, however, may last for more than two weeks. Three types of influenza viruses affect people, called Type A, Type B, and Type C (Longo,2012).

There have been a number of reports in the literature documenting that infectious disease processes rapidly accelerate vitamin C depletion and greatly increase vitamin C requirement (Pauling, 1971; Levy, 2002).

Influenza kills as many as 50,000 to 70,000 people annually in the United States alone. Of even greater concern is that annual influenza deaths have been on the rise, increasing substantially over the last two decades (Thompson et al., 2003). However, vitamin C in high enough doses has already been shown to be very effective at eradicating the influenza virus, sometimes after serious complications such as encephalitis have arisen along with many other viral syndromes (Klenner, 1949; Vargas-Magne, 1963). In spite of this information, vitamin C is still not routinely utilized against this infectious disease, and none of the various forms of vitamin C are included in the formularies of nearly all US hospitals. To date no generally effective therapeutic measures have been

Vitamin C is an essential nutrient for humans, with pleiotropic functions related to its ability to donate electrons. Vitamin C contributes to immune defense by supporting and directly stimulating various cellular functions of both the innate and adaptive immune system. Consistent with this documented ability of vitamin C to upregulate the immune system, the scientific literature has abundant documentation of the ability of vitamin C to cure a number of viruses (Klenner, 1951; Stone, 1972; Levy, 2002, Gonzalez, 2014, Gonzalez, 2016). In this particular case report, the viral infection had reached the point of being life-threatening, even though it was afflicting a young man who previously had always been in exemplary good health. Case Report Presentation M.G., a 25-year-old forensic psychologist from Ponce, Puerto Rico, was in his baseline state of excellent health

© 2018 International Society for Orthomolecular Medicine ISSN 0317-0209

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