Editor's Note:
Because of the unusually high amounts of
ascorbic acid used in Dr. Klenner's treatment as reported in his paper, we asked
him to verify amounts mentioned. Following is his answer:
"To the Editor of the ICAN Journal: This will
confirm that all 'quantity' factors given in my paper are correct and can be
confirmed from hospital and medical office records. The notation relative to 150
grams represents the amount used for reversing pathology in a given case and was
the amount given over a period of 24 hours. (The I.V. was continuous.) This was
given in three bottles of 5D water, decanting only enough from 1000 c.c. to be
replaced by the 'C' ampoules.
"Recently the FDA has published a 'warning'
that too much soda-ascorbate might be harmful, referring to the sodium ion. In
reply to this I can state that for many years I have taken 10 to 20 grams of
sodium ascorbate by mouth daily, and my blood sodium remains normal. These
levels are checked by an approved laboratory. 20 grams each day and my urine
remains at or just above pH 6."
Signed:
Fred R. Klenner, M.D.
Appendix - more case histories
Folklore of past civilizations report that for
every disease afflicting man there is an herb or its equivalent that will effect
a cure. In Puerto Rico the story has long been told "that
to have the health tree Acerola in one's back yard would keep
colds out of the front door."[1] The ascorbic acid content of this cherry-like
fruit is thirty times that found in oranges. In
Pennsylvania, U.S.A., it was, and for many still is, Boneset,
scientifically called Eupatorium
perfoliatum[2]. Although it is now rarely prescribed by
physicians, Boneset was the most commonly used medicinal plant of eastern United
States. Most farmsteads had a bundle of dried Boneset in the attic or woodshed
from which a most bitter tea would be meted out to the unfortunate victim of a
cold or fever. Having lived in that section of the country we qualified many
times for this particular drink. The Flu of 1918 stands out
very forcefully in that the Klenners survived when scores about us were dying.
Although bitter it was curative and most of the time the cure was overnight.
Several years ago my curiosity led me to assay this "herbal medicine" and to my
surprise and delight I found that we had been taking from ten to thirty grams of
natural vitamin C at one time. Even then it was given by body weight. Children
one cupful; adults two to three cupfuls. Cups those days held eight ounces.
Twentieth century man seemingly forgets that his ancestors made crude. drugs
from various plants and roots, and that these decoctions, infusions, juices,
powders, pills and ointments served his purpose. Elegant pharmacy has only made
the forms and shapes more acceptable.
To understand the chemical
behavior of ascorbic acid in human pathology, one must go beyond its present
academic status either as a factor essential for life or as a substance
necessary to prevent scurvy. This knowledge is elementary. Listen to what appeared in Food and Life Yearbook 1939, U.S.
Department of Agriculture[3]: "In fact even when there is not a single
outward symptom of trouble, a person may be in a state of vitamin C deficiency
more dangerous than scurvy itself. When such a condition is not
detected, and continues uncorrected, the teeth and bones will be damaged, and
what may be even more serious, the blood stream is weakened to the point where
it can no longer resist or fight infections not so easily cured as scurvy." It
is true that without these infinitesimal amounts myriads of body processes would
deteriorate and even come to a fatal halt.
Ascorbic acid has many
important functions. It is a powerful
oxidizer and when given in massive amounts; that is, 50 grams
to 150 grams, intravenously, for certain pathological
conditions, and "run in" as fast as 20 Gauge needle will allow, it acts as a
"Flash Oxidizer,"[4] often correcting the pathology within minutes.
Ascorbic acid is also a powerful reducing agent. Its
neutralizing action on certain toxins, exotoxins, virus infections,
endotoxins and histamine is in direct proportion to the amount of the
lethal factor involved and the amount of ascorbic acid given. At times it is
necessary to use ascorbic acid intramuscularly. It should
always be used orally, when possible, along with the
needle.
If one is to employ
ascorbic acid intelligently, some index for requirements must be realized.
Unfortunately there exists today a sort of "brand" called "minimum daily
requirements." This illegitimate "child" has been co-fathered by the
National Academy of Science and The National Research
Council and represents a tragic error in judgment. There are many
factors which increase the demand by the body for ascorbic acid, and unless
these are appreciated, at least by physicians, there can be no real progress. It
is vitally important that cognizance be taken of the demand by the body for
ascorbic acid far beyond so-called scorbutic levels. Briefly these demands can
be summarized:
With such knowledge it is
no longer possible to accept a set numerical unit in terms of minimal
daily requirements. This is true because of the simple fact that people
are different and these same people experience different situations at various
times. With ascorbic acid, today's adequate supply means little or nothing in
terms of the needs for tomorrow. Let us start thinking in terms of
maximum requirements. For too long a time we have under
supplied our children and ourselves by accepting through negative ignorance and
acquiescence so-called standards. Based on scant data on mammalian synthesis,
available for the rat, a 70-Kg. individual would produce 1.8
grams[5] to 4.0 grams[6] of ascorbic acid per day in the unstressed
condition. Under stress, up to 15.2
grams.[7] Compare this to the 70 mg recommended for
daily requirements without stress and 200 mg for the simple stress of the
obstetrical patient, and you will recognize the disparity and understand why we
have been waging a one man war against the establishment in Washington for 23
years.
Work on mammalian
biosynthesis of ascorbic acid indicates that the vitamin C story as is generally
accepted represents an oversimplification of available
evidence.[8,9,10] This often leads to misinterpretations and
false impressions. It has been proposed that the
biochemical lesion which produces the human need for exogenous sources of
ascorbic acid, is the absence of the active enzyme, l-gulonolactone oxidase from
the human liver[11]. A defect or loss of the gene controlling the
synthesis of this enzyme in man, blocks the final phase in the series for
converting glucose to ascorbic acid. Virus can mutate cells, X-Rays can do it
and it can occur by chance. Such a mutation could have happened, denying all
progenies of this mutated animal the ability to produce ascorbic acid. Survival
demanded ascorbic acid from an exogenous source. This is not remarkable. Other
recognized genetic diseases in which a missing enzyme causes a pathological
syndrome, in man, are phenylketonuria, galactosemia and
alkaptonuria.
It is worthy to note that
Sealock and Goodland have ascribed to ascorbic acid the faculty of being the
necessary co-enzyme in the metabolic oxidation of tyrosine. The
velocity of the oxidation in this reaction is dependent upon the concentration
of vitamin C. Tyrosine is essential in breaking down protein to usable amino
acid. The scorbutic guinea-pig's liver is unable to oxidize
tyrosine except in the presence of ascorbic acid. This suggests a lead in the
study of the metabolic abnormality Alkaptonuria in humans.
Ascorbic acid administration will correct the alkaptonuria of the scorbutic
guinea pig. Its effect on human alkaptonuria has been inconsistent. The reason:
Inadequate use of ascorbic acid.
The inability of man to
manufacture his own ascorbic acid, due to genetic fault, has been called
"hypoascorbemia" by Irwin Stone.[12] This is another reason for abolishing the
present concept of daily minimal requirements. The physiological requirements in
man are no different from other mammals capable of carrying out this
synthesis.
Various tests have been
employed to determine the degree of body saturation of vitamin C, but for the
most part they have been misleading. Blood and urine samples
analyzed with 2:6 dichlorophenol indophenol will give values roughly 7 percent
less than when testing with dinitrophenol hydrazine. Gothlin advocates the
capillary fragility test which is similar to the
tourniquet test of Hess in results. Both can be used to
estimate the quantity of vitamin C necessary to maintain capillary
integrity. The intradermal test
of Rotter as modified by Slobody[13] is again gaining new recruits. In principle it is the same as the lingual
test of Ringdorf and Cheraskin[14] since both are based on the time required to
decolorize dye. The lingual test is rapid and simple to perform but it requires
a syringe with a 25 gauge needle and a stop watch. Since the dye methods depend
on the reduction of the reagent by vitamin C, any substance having a reducing
potential lower than the dye is a possible source of interference. Twenty years
ago we elected to measure, as a therapeutic gauge, the amount of vitamin C in
urine by borrowing on its ability to reduce qualitative Benedict's solution. A 2
plus Benedict's reaction in a known dextrose free urine was accepted as a
standard. This test was helpful in gauging requirements for simple stress, but
not accurate enough when using needle therapy. Fifteen
years ago we developed the Silver Nitrate-Urine
test[15]. This test employs 10 drops of 5 percent
silver nitrate and 10 drops urine which is placed in a Wasserman tube. When read
in two minutes it will give a color pattern showing white, beige, smoke gray or
charcoal or various combinations of any two depending upon the degree of
saturation. We have found this color index test is all one will need for
establishing the correct amount of ascorbic acid to use by
mouth, by muscle, by vein in the handling of all types of human pathology either
as the specific drug or as an adjuvant with other antibiotics or neutralizing
chemicals. In severe pathological conditions the urine sample, taken every four
hours, must show a fine charcoal-like precipitation with a clear supernatant
liquid if positive clinical results are to be realized. Spilling in the urine is
not new. Abraham and Keefer have demonstrated that when penicillin is injected
intravenously, excretions in the urine account for 60 percent of the
administered dose.
In 1935 Stanley isolated a
crystalline protein possessing the properties of tobacco mosaic virus. It
contained two substances, ribonucleic acid (RNA) and protein.
The simple structure characteristic of tobacco mosaic virus was soon found to be
a basic property of many human viruses such as coxsackie virus
(which I believe to be the cause of Multiple Sclerosis),
Echoviruses and polioviruses - they all
contain only ribonucleic acid and protein. There exist minor variations.
Adenoviruses contain deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and protein.
Other viruses such as that causing influenza contain added
lipid and polysaccharides. Deoxyribonucleic acid is used to program the large
viruses, like mumps, ribonucleic acid is used to program the small viruses, like
measles. The role of the protein coat is to protect the parasitic but unstable
nucleic acid as it rides the "blood highway" or "lymphatic system" to gain
specific cell entry. Pure viral nucleic acid without its protein coat can be
inactivated by constituents of normal blood. There are several theories as to
what happens after cell entry:
In
1953[19] we presented a case history and films of a
patient with virus pneumonia. This patient was unconscious,
with a fever of 106.8°F (A. corrected) when admitted to the hospital. 140 grams
ascorbic acid was given intravenously over a period of 72 hours at which time
she was awake, sitting up in bed and taking fluids freely by mouth. The
temperature was normal. Since that time we have observed a more deadly syndrome
associated with a virus causing head and chest colds. This is one of the
adenovirus striking in the area of the upper respiratory tract with resulting
fever, sore throat and eyes, and when in children can cause fatal pneumonia.
More often death is indirect by way of incipient encephalitis
where the child can be dead in 30 minutes. These are the babies and children
found dead in bed and attributed to suffocation [SIDS, Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome]. It is
suffocation but by way of a syndrome we observed and reported in
1957[20] which is similar to that found in cephalic
tetanus-toxemia culminating in diaphragmatic spasm, with dyspnea and finally
asphyxia.[21] By 1958[22] we had collected sufficient information from
our office and hospital patients to catalog this deadly syndrome Into two
important stages.
Other findings of this
dramatic second stage are:
It is apparent that the
second stage of this syndrome is triggered by a breakthrough at the site of
the blood-brain barrier. The time required for neurological
changes to become evident is roughly comparable to the time necessary for
similar neuropathology to be demonstrated following a severe head
injury. Cerebral edema exists in both conditions. In my practice I
start massive ascorbic acid therapy immediately. I have seen children
dead in from 30 minutes to 2 hours because their attending physician
was not impressed with their illness upon hospital admission. An autopsy on one
of these patients showed bilateral pneumonitis - all one needs to spark a
deadly encephalitis. To indicate just how common this syndrome
presents itself, I relate here a newspaper account of a 15 year old girl who had
a mild, lingering cold for several weeks. She attended a dance
party one evening and except for a complaint of feeling extremely tired, she
went to bed apparently well. She was found dead in bed the following morning. An
autopsy showed bilateral pneumonia. How many times have you read such an
account? This is why it is necessary for everybody to take adequate supplemental
vitamin C to guard against such disasters.
In 1960 we decided to
research the literature before writing our paper. "Virus Encephalitis As
A Sequel Of The Pneumonias."[22] Rosenfield in 1903 described a similar
syndrome under the caption "Brain Purpura or Hemorrhagic Encephalitis." Comby,
in 1907, was the first to call attention to the interesting "metastic" sequela
of the pneumonias. Baker and Noran in 1945 enumerated
five groups, each showing certain definite clinical characteristics which may be
of both diagnostic and prognostic significance in relation to this virus
syndrome. [23]
These groups plus two
additional types, namely:
were as we reported them,
independently, in the Tri-State Medical Journal, October 1958. Their results:
Some recovered, some died and still others lived as "vegetation" mental
cripples. All of our patients recovered. Thirteen years from the time
of the Baker-Noran report to the time of our report and 13 years from the time
of our report to the present time. This makes the issue urgent. Physicians must
recognize the inherent danger of the lingering head or chest
cold and appreciate the importance of early massive vitamin C
therapy.
Clinical problems such as
these groups present, leads one to speculate on the pathways in which the virus
gains entrance into the brain. We can summarize:
Bakay[24] reported that the permeability of the
blood-brain barrier can be changed by introducing various toxic agents
into the blood circulation. Chambers and
Zweifach[25] emphasized the importance of the intercellular
cement of the capillary wall in regulating permeability of the blood vessels of
the central nervous system. In this syndrome the toxic substance is an
adenovirus. Ascorbic acid will repair and maintain the
integrity of the capillary wall.
In the treatment of
burns ascorbic acid, in sufficient amounts, reflects itself as a truly
miracle substance. In the early forties, when I was using ascorbic acid,
intramuscularly, in treating bacillary dysentery, shiga type,
with excellent results, Lund, Lam and many others were using, what they called,
massive doses of ascorbic acid in the treatment of burns. One or two grams each
day, in fluids, was the recognized dose. Burns are at the beginning first degree
and some remain as just an erythema. Many times the first degree burn
progresses rapidly to the second degree stage and remains as
"blisters". Still others go on to third degree which usually is
more pronounced on the third-plus post-burn day. There is a fourth
stage which results from lack of knowledge in treatment. It terminates
with skin grafting and plastic surgery. We believe that
ascorbic acid will eliminate the fourth stage and the third stage if used as we
will later program.
The pathologic
physiology of a burn wound from the moment of the accident is
in a state of dynamic change until the wound heals or the patient dies. The primary consideration is the
phenomenon of blood sludging originally recognized by Knisely in
1945.[26,27] Initially there is intravascular agglutination
of red blood cells into distinctly visible, smooth, hard, rigid, basic masses.
Lofstrom in 1959 demonstrated that the oxygen uptake by the
tissues is greatly reduced because of the sludging and therefore reduced rate of
flow. Berkeley[28] in 1960 concluded that this phenomenon of
sludging or agglutination results in capillary thrombosis in the area of the
burn, extending proximally to involve the large arterioles and venules and
thereby creating tissue destruction greater than that originally produced by the
burn. Anoxia produces added tissue
destruction. Lund and Levenson[28] found that after severe burns there is
considerable alteration in the metabolism of ascorbic acid as shown by a low
concentration of ascorbic acid in the plasma either with the patient fasting or
after saturation tests and also low urinary excretion of vitamin C either with
the patient fasting or after the injection of test doses. The extent of the
abnormality closely paralleled the severity of the burn. Bergman[30] reported an increase demand for ascorbic acid
in burns especially when epithelization and formation of granulation tissue are
taking place. Lam[31] also reported in 1941 a marked decrease in the
plasma ascorbic acid concentration in patients with severe burns. Klasson[32] although limiting the amount of ascorbic acid
to a dose range of 300 mg to 2000 mg daily, in divided doses, found that it
hastened the healing of wounds by producing healthy granulation tissue and also
that it reduced local edema. He rationalized that ascorbic acid used
locally as a 2% dressing possessed astringent properties similar to
hydrogen peroxide. He also reported that antibiotic therapy was rarely
necessary.
Harlen
Stone[33] suggested the use of gentamicin in major burns
to lower the sepsis caused by pseudomonas. Absorption of its exotoxin from the
infected burn wound inhibits the bacterial defense mechanism of the
reticuloendothelial system. Death can result either from the toxemia alone or
from an associated septicemia. We have found that the secret in treating burns
can be summarized in five steps:
If seen early after the
burn there will be no infections and no eschar formations. This eliminates fluid
formation, since the eschar traps will not exist and there will be no distal
edema because the venous and lymphatic systems will remain open. There will be
no arterial obstruction and no nerve compression. Pseudomonas will not be a
problem, since ascorbic acid destroys the exotoxin systemically and locally.
Even if the burn is seen late when pseudomonas is a major problem the gram
negative bacilli will be destroyed in a few days leaving a clean healthy
surface. I have seen eschars 2 inches wide and 1/2 inch thick,
severely infected so that stench had to be controlled with deodorizing sprays,
melt away when employing the method outlined. Ascorbic acid
also eliminates pain so that opiates or their equivalent are not
required. In extremely extensive burns that
involve back and front of the patient, the
"Hoverbed"[35] employed by the British should be considered.
It uses the same principle as the hovercraft to lift a solid object. What has
been overlooked in burns is that there are many living epithelial cells in the
areas that grossly look like "raw muscle." With the use of ascorbic acid these
cells are kept viable, will multiply and soon meet with other proliferating
units in the establishment of a new integument.
We are all plagued with
varying degrees of chronic carbon monoxide poisoning. This is
the price we pay for putting our "railroads" on our highways,
smoking and being too lazy to walk. Small amounts of carbon
monoxide, if constantly maintained in the alveoli, can produce serious effects.
Carbon monoxide in the inspired air leads to oxygen deficiency in the tissues
causing extreme exhaustion. The affinity of carbon monoxide for hemoglobin is
roughly 300 times as great as that for oxygen. In addition to
active replacement of oxy-hemoglobin the presence of some proportion of
carboxy-hemoglobin decreases the dissociability of such oxy-hemoglobin as
remains. Carbon monoxide can be released from hemoglobin if the patient is
exposed to high pressure of oxygen, 93% along with 7% carbon dioxide. This is
not always available. Ascorbic acid in the blood is constantly losing molecules
of water. Perfectly dry carbon monoxide and oxygen cannot unite to form carbon
dioxide, but carbon monoxide and water may give rise to carbon dioxide in the
complete absence of oxygen. The reactions which take place are CO +
H2O = HCOOH CO2 + H2 (Wright). Here the oxygen
of the water has been used to oxidize carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide with the
liberation of hydrogen. Glutathione may facilitate this
cellular oxidation by acting as a hydrogen acceptor (Hopkins). Clinical
experience suggests that if sufficient ascorbic acid is suddenly placed into the
blood stream - 12 grams to 50 grams - that through "Flash
Oxidation" a concentration of oxygen is made high enough to pull carbon
monoxide from hemoglobin to form carbon dioxide. This rapidly formed carbon
dioxide acts with the high oxygen tension to serve the same purpose as when
given by "mask," further enhancing the chemical action taking place. Ascorbic
acid will also prevent residuals such as paralysis, blindness, interference with
sensations, muscle spasms or twitchings which in some cases can be
permanent.
Observations made on over
300 consecutive obstetrical cases using supplemental ascorbic acid, by mouth,
convinced me that failure to use this agent in sufficient amounts in pregnancy
borders on malpractice. The lowest amount of ascorbic acid used was 4 grams and
the highest amount 15 grams each day. (Remember the rat-no stress manufactures
equivalent "C" up to 4 grams and with stress up to 15.2 grams). Requirements
were roughly 4 grams first trimester, 6 grams second trimester and 10 grams
third trimester. Approximately 20 percent required 15 grams, each day, during
last trimester. Eighty percent of this series received a booster injection of 10
grams, intravenously, on admission to the hospital. Hemoglobin levels were much
easier to maintain. Leg cramps were less than three percent and
always was associated with "getting out" of Vitamin C tablets. Striae
gravidarum was seldom encountered and when it was present there existed
an associated problem of too much eating and too little walking. The capacity of
the skin to resist the pressure of an expanding uterus will also vary in
different individuals. Labor was shorter and less painful. There were no
postpartum hemorrhages. The perineum was found to be remarkably elastic and
episiotomy was performed electively. Healing was always by first intention and
even after 15 and 20 years following the last child the firmness of the perineum
is found to be similar to that of a primigravida in those who have continued
their daily supplemental vitamin C. No patient required catheterization. No
toxic manifestations were demonstrated in this series. There was no cardiac
stress even though 22 patients of the series had rheumatic hearts. One patient
in particular was carried through two pregnancies without complications. She had
been warned by her previous obstetrician that a second pregnancy would terminate
with a maternal death. She received no ascorbic acid with her first pregnancy.
This lady has been back teaching school for the past 10 years. She still takes
10 grams of ascorbic acid daily. Infants born under massive ascorbic acid
therapy were all robust. Not a single case required resuscitation. We
experienced no feeding problems. The Fultz quadruplets were in this series. They
took milk nourishment on the second day. These babies were started on 50 mg
ascorbic acid the first day and, of course, this was increased as time went on.
Our only nursery equipment was one hospital bed, an old, used single unit hot
plate and an equally old 10 quart kettle. Humidity and ascorbic acid tells this
story. They are the only quadruplets that have survived in southeastern United
States. Another case of which I am justly proud is one in which we delivered 10
children to one couple. All are healthy and good looking. There were no
miscarriages. All are living and well. They are frequently referred to as
the vitamin C kids, in fact all of the babies from this series
were called "Vitamin C Babies" by the nursing personnel--they
were distinctly different.
One of the "scare" weapons
used by the critics on high daily doses of ascorbic acid is the oxalic
acid-kidney stone hypothesis. Meakins[36] states that the chief factors in the formation
of renal calculi are perversions of metabolic processes, infection and stasis in
the urinary tract. There are two schools of thought on stone formation: 1) That
there is a central nucleus of colloids on which the crystalloids are
precipitated; 2) That the crystalloids are deposited from the urine in which
they are present in concentrated solution, in which salt and hydrogen ion
concentrations are important factors. In all cases stasis and a concentrated
urine appear to be the chief physiological factors. The only way that oxalic
acid can be produced from ascorbic acid is through splitting of the lactone
ring. This happens above pH5. The reaction of urine when 10 grams of vitamin C
is taken daily is usually pH6. Oxalic acid precipitates out of solution only
from a neutral or alkaline solution-pH7 to pH10. Kelli
and Zilva[37] reported that "Nutrition experiments showed
that dehydroascorbic acid is protected in vivo from rapid transformation to the
antiscorbutically impotent diketogulonic acid from which oxalic acid is
derived." Values reported in the literature for normal 24 hour urinary oxalate
excretions for humans range from 14 mg to 56 mg. Lamden et
al.[38] found in a group of volunteers that the
ingestion of 9 grams ascorbic acid daily resulted in oxalate spills as high as
68 mg for 24 hours and in the controls without extra vitamin C the high was 64
mg for a 24 hour period.
These critics have
overlooked the individual with diabetes mellitus. The amount of
oxalic acid found in the diabetic patient approximates that found in the urine
of a normal person taking 10 grams vitamin C each day. With the diabetic we find
a paradox. Give this individual 10 grams ascorbic acid daily, by mouth, and the
urinary oxalate excretion remains relatively unchanged. Diabetics are known for
their diuresis. The individual who takes 10 or more grams of vitamin C each day
will find that this organic compound is an excellent diuretic. No urinary
stasis; no urine concentration.
The ascorbic acid
kidney stone story is a myth. Methylene blue will dissolve calcium oxalate
stones giving 65 mg orally 2 to 3 times a day. (Dr. M. J. Vernon Smith: Med.
World News, Dec. 4, 1970)
It is estimated that 6500
deaths occur each year in the United States from snake bite.
Many more from various flying insects, spiders, certain plants and some
caterpillars.These are needless deaths. Several factors are at work in these pathologies:
Wells[40] in 1925 called the poison of certain spiders
and snakes zootoxins and of poisonous plants,
phytotoxins. Ford[41] in 1911 reported three classes of toxins in
plants and fungi:
It is a demonstrated
principle that the production of histamine and other end
products from deaminized cell proteins released by injury to cells are a cause
of shock. The clinical value of ascorbic
acid in combating shock is explained when we realize that the deaminizing
enzymes from the damaged cells are inhibited by vitamin
C.[42] It has been shown by
Chambers and Pollock[43] that mechanical damage to a cell results in pH
changes which reverse the cell enzymes from constructive to destructive
activity. The pH changes spread to other cells. This destructive activity
releases histamine a major shock producing substance. The presence of vitamin C
inhibits this enzyme transition into the destructive phase. Clark and Rossiter[44] reported that conditions of shock and stress
cause depletion of the ascorbic acid content of the plasma. As with the virus
bodies, ascorbic acid also joins with the protein factor of these toxins
effecting quick destruction.
The answer to these
emergencies is simple. Large amounts of ascorbic acid 350 mg to 700 mg per Kg.
body weight given intravenously. In small patients, where veins are at a
premium, ascorbic acid can easily be given intramuscularly in amounts up to two
grams at one site. Several areas can be used with each dose given. Ice held to
the gluteal muscles until red, almost eliminates the pain. We always reapply the
ice for a few minutes after the injection. Ascorbic acid is also given, by
mouth, as follow-up treatment. Every emergency room should be stocked with
vitamin C ampoules of sufficient strength so that time will never be counted-as
a factor in saving a life. The 4 gram, 20 c.c, ampoule and 10 gram 50 c.c.
ampoule must be made available to the physician.
As an example of the lethal
effect of certain stings and bites, I briefly relate a case history. An adult
male came to my office complaining of severe chest pain and the inability to
take a deep breath. Stated that he had been "stung" or "bitten" 10 minutes
earlier. Thinking that it was a Black Widow and not bothering to look for fang
marks, due to the gravity of the situation, I gave one gram calcium gluconate
intravenously. This gave no relief. He begged for help saying he was
dying. He was becoming cyanotic [blue or livid skin from lack of
oxygen]. Twelve grams of vitamin C was quickly pulled into a 50 c.c. syringe and
with a 20 gauge needle was given intravenously as fast as the plunger could be
pushed. Even before the injection was completed, he exclaimed, "Thank God". The
poison had been neutralized that rapidly. He was sent home to locate the
"culprit". He soon returned with an object that looked like a mouse. It was 1
1/2 inches long with long brown hair. There was a dark ridge down the entire
back. It had seven pairs of propelling units and a tail much like a mouse. The
following day I took "The Thing" to Duke University where it was identified as
the Puss Caterpillar. This unusual caterpillar left 44 red
raised marks on the back of its victim. Except for vitamin C this individual
would have died from shock and asphyxiation.
Merton Lamden, a
biochemist, writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, Feb. 11, 1971,
expresses grave doubts about the safety of large doses of ascorbic acid taken by
mouth. He gives a report by
Paterson[45] on the diabetogenic effect of dehydroascorbic
acid on rats. Paterson in 1950 employed only the Ketone formula of ascorbic
acid, dehydroascorbic acid, which he administered, undiluted, intravenously, in
extraordinary amounts. His results were based on giving rats, weighing 100 grams
to 120 grams, dehydroascorbic acid in doses from 20 to 50 mg. This transposed to
a man weighing 70 kilograms would represent a dose of 3,500 grams-roughly 5,000
grams ascorbic acid. Obviously the work has no relationship with the ingestion
of ascorbic acid by humans. I have taken from 10 to 20 grams of ascorbic acid
daily since my last visit to this college - 18 years ago. I do not have diabetes
mellitus and if I might digress a moment, neither have I had a kidney
stone.
Over the past 17 years we
have studied the effect of 10 grams by mouth, in patients with diabetes
mellitus. We found that every diabetic not taking supplemental vitamin C could
be classified as having sub-clinical scurvy. For this reason
they find it difficult to heal wounds. The diabetic patient
will use the supplemental vitamin C for better utilization of his insulin. It
will assist the liver in the metabolism of carbohydrates and to reinstate his
body to heal wounds like normal individuals. We found that 60% of all diabetics
could be controlled with diet and 10 grams ascorbic acid daily. The other 40%
will need much less needle insulin and less oral medication.
Contrary to what Medical News Letter, (Vol. 12 # 26, Dec. 25 1970) carried to
the physicians the Tes-Tape is accurate in testing urine
samples.
In 1960 and again in 1966,
in papers delivered before the Tri-State Medical Society, I called attention to
the "scurvy" levels of ascorbic acid found in
postoperative patients. Plasma levels recorded before starting
anesthesia and after cessation of such inhalants and completion of surgery
remained unchanged. This has lead many to believe that surgery created little or
no demand for supplemental "C". We found, however, that samples of blood taken
six hours after surgery showed drops of approximately 1/4 the starting amount
and at 12 hours the levels were down to one-half. Samples taken 24 hours later,
without added ascorbic acid to fluids, showed levels 3/4 lower than the original
samples. Baylor University research team reported similar
findings in 1965. Bartlett, Jones[48] and others reported that in spite of low
levels of plasma ascorbic acid at time of surgery, normal wound healing may be
produced by adequate vitamin C therapy during the post-operative period. Lanman and Ingalls[47] showed that the tensile strength of healing
wounds is lowered in the presence of "scurvy plasma levels". Schumacher[48] reported that the preoperative use of as
little as 500 mg of vitamin C given orally "was remarkably successful in
preventing shock and weakness" following dental extractions. Many other
investigators have shown in both laboratory and clinical studies, that optimal
primary wound healing is dependent to a large extent upon the vitamin C content
of the tissues.
In 1949, it was my
privilege to assist at an abdominal exploratory laparotomy. A mass of small
viscera was found "glued together". The area was so friable that every attempt
at separation produced a torn intestine. After repairing some 20 tears the
surgeon closed the cavity as a hopeless situation. Two grams
ascorbic acid was given by syringe every two hours for 48 hours and then 4 times
each day. In 36 hours the patient was walking the halls and in seven days was
discharged with normal elimination and no pain. She has outlived her surgeon by
many years. We recommend that all patients take 10 grams ascorbic acid each day.
Where this is not done and the surgery is elective, then 10 grams by mouth
should be given for several weeks prior to surgery. At least 30 grams should be
given, daily, in solutions, post-operatively, until oral medication is allowed
and tolerated.
After studying hundreds of
college students, Yale researchers have evidence that strengthens the link
between mononucleosis and Epstein-Barr virus, a herpes-like
agent also associated with Burkitt
lymphoma.[49] Large doses of intravenous "C" has a striking
influence on the course of mononucleosis. In one patient who
was given the last rites of her church, the girls mother took things into her
own hands when the attending physician refused to give ascorbic acid. In each
bottle of intravenous fluids she would quickly "tap in" 20 to 30 grams vitamin
C. The patient made an uneventful recovery. Her mother has her B.S. in Nursing
and has been a long time advocate of massive "C" therapy.
Schlegel[50] from Tulane University has been using 1.5
grams ascorbic acid daily to prevent recurrences of cancer of the
bladder. He and biochemist Pipkin have been able to demonstrate that in
the presence of ascorbic acid, carcinogenic metabolites will not develop in the
urine. They suggest that spontaneous tumor formation is the result of
faulty tryptophan metabolism while urine is retained in the
bladder. Schlegel termed ascorbic acid "An Anticancer Vitamin".
Along this line Glick and
Hosoda[51] reported on work by Von Numers and Pettersson
that the depletion of mast cells from guinea pigs skin was due to ascorbic acid
deficiency. The possibilities indicated are that vitamin C is necessary either
directly or indirectly for formation of mast cells, or for their maintenance
once formed or both. Ascorbic acid will control myelocytic leukemia provided 25
to 30 grams are taken orally each day.
One can only speculate on
what massive therapy would do in all forms of cancer. Many pathologic conditions
are cured by giving 5 million to 100,000 million units of penicillin as an
intravenous drip over a period of 4 to 6 weeks. How long must we wait for
someone to start continuous ascorbic acid drip for 2 to 3 months, giving 100 to
300 grams each day, for various malignant conditions?
Clemmesen[52] states that the important principles in
management of barbiturate poisoning are anti-shock therapy, continuous oxygen
and patent airways. Hadden et al.[53] suggest six measures as supportive treatment.
An intensive care unit would be necessary to carry out these functions. All one
really need do is give adequate ascorbic acid therapy. One patient who had taken
2640 mg Lotusate (talbutal) was seen in the emergency room with
a blood pressure of 60/0. Twelve grams vitamin C was given intravenously with a
50 c.c. syringe and then the needle attached to a bottle of 5D water containing
50 grams ascorbic acid. Within 10 minutes the blood pressure was 100/60
demonstrating the effect of vitamin C on shock. A second bottle of 250 c.c. 5D
water containing one gram emivan was started in the other arm. The patient was
awake in 3 hours, taking juice with "C" added. She received 125 grams ascorbic
acid by vein in 12 hours. Ascorbic acid not only assists with hepatic metabolism
but also as a major diuretic flushes these compounds out by way of the kidneys.
Nasal oxygen running 6 liters per minute was also employed. Another patient who
had masked 2400 mg seconal with paraldehyde was awake after 42 grams of ascorbic
acid had been given by vein as fast as a 20 gauge needle could carry the flow.
She received 75 grams vitamin C by vein and 30 grams by mouth in a 24 hour
period.
Mention should be made of
the role[54] played by vitamin C as a regulator of the rate
at which cholesterol is formed in the body; deficiency of the vitamin speeding
the formation of this substance. In experimental work, guinea pigs fed a diet
free of ascorbic acid showed a 600 percent acceleration in cholesterol formation
in the adrenal glands. Ten grams or more each day and then eat all the eggs you
want. That is my schedule and my cholesterol remains normal, Russia has
published many articles demonstrating these same benefits.
Ascorbic acid has no equal
as a adjuvant with other drugs in many conditions. With
Tolserol it is curative in the treatment of Lockjaw. Both drugs
must be used in proper amounts. In our case 1000 mg Tolserol given intravenously
to a boy weighing 20 Kg. was the optimal amount to use. In 48 hours he was given 90 grams ascorbic acid and 3000 mg
Tolserol, all intravenously.[55] Jungeblut[56] reported that vitamin C, when added to tetanus
toxin "in vitro", brings about inactivation of the toxin.
Two cases of
Trichinosis was treated and cured using Vitamin C: and
Para-Aminobenzoic acid.[57] Although the temperature curve was returned to
normal in 36 hours it was found that nine days of treatment was necessary for
permanent cures.
Viral hepatitis needs brief
mentioning. There are two types: 1) Infectious hepatitis; 2) Needle hepatitis.
Physical activity has always been considered to increase
the severity and prolong the course of the disease.[58] In Vietnam, Freebern
and Repsher showed that pick-and-shovel details had no effects on the 199
controls as against 199 kept at bed rest.[59] One thing is certain. Given massive
intravenous ascorbic acid therapy and patients are well and back to work in from
3 to 7 days. In these cases the vitamin is also employed by mouth as follow-up
therapy. Dr. Bauer at the University Clinic, Basel, Switzerland, reported that
just 10 grams daily, intravenously, proved the best treatment
available.
We could continue
indefinitely extolling the merits of ascorbic acid.
These injections are
usually given with a syringe in a dilution of one gram to 5 c.c fluid. This
concentration will produce immediate thirst. This is prevented by having the
patient drink a glass of juice just before giving the injection.
It has been suggested that
ascorbic acid metabolism may be an index of total metabolism and thus serve as a
general diagnostic guide. Adults taking at least 10 grams of ascorbic acid
daily, and children under ten at least one gram for each year of life will find
that the brain will be clearer, the mind more active, the body
less wearied and the memory more retentive.
The types of pathology
treated with massive doses of ascorbic acid run the entire gamut of medical
knowledge. Body needs are so great that so called minimal daily requirements
must be ignored. A genetic error is the probable cause for our inability to
manufacture ascorbic acid, thus requiring exogenous sources of vitamin C. Simple
dye or chemical test are available for checking individual needs. Ascorbic acid
destroys virus bodies by taking up the protein coat so that new units cannot be
made, by contributing to the break-down of virus nucleic acid with the result of
controlled purine metabolism. Its action in dealing with virus pneumonia and
virus encephalitis has been outlined. The clinical use of vitamin C in pneumonia
has a very sound foundation. In experimental tests
monkeys kept on a vitamin C free diet all died of pneumonia while those with
adequate diets remained healthy.[62] Many investigators have shown an increased need for ascorbic
acid in this condition.[63,64] Brody in 1953 after studying vitamin C and
colds in college students advised that ascorbic acid be given early and often in
sufficient amounts. Regnier[65] reporting in review of Allergy found that the
larger the dose of ascorbic acid the better were the results. Our findings
resulted in a schedule of one gram each hour for 48 hours and then 10 grams each
day by mouth. Those under ten at least one gram for each year of
life.
Virus encephalitis is a
deadly syndrome and must be treated heroically with intravenous and/or
intramuscular injections of ascorbic acid. We recommend a dose schedule of from
350 mg to 700 mg per Kg. body weight diluted to at least 18 c.c. of 5D water to
each gram of "C". In small children, 2 and 3 grams can be given intramuscularly,
every 2 hours. An ice cap to the buttock will prevent soreness and induration.
Ascorbic acid in amounts under 400 mg per Kg. body weight can be administered
intravenously with a syringe in dilutions of 5 c.c. to each one gram provided
the ampoule is buffered with sodium bicarbonate with sodium Bisulfite added. As
much as 12 grams can be given in this manner with a 50 c.c. syringe. Larger
amounts must be diluted with "bottle" dextrose or "saline" solutions and run in
by needle drip. This is true because amounts like 20 to 25 grams which can be
given with a 100 c.c. syringe can suddenly dehydrate the cerebral cortex so as
to produce convulsive movements of the legs. This represents a peculiar
syndrome, symptomatic epilepsy, in which the patient is mentally clear and
experiences no discomfiture except that the lower extremities are in mild
convulsion. This epileptiform type seizure will continue for 20 plus minutes and
then abruptly stop. Mild pressure on the knees will stop the seizure so long as
pressure is maintained. If still within the time limit of the seizure the spasm
will reappear by simply withdrawing the hand pressure. I have seen this in two
patients receiving 26 grams intravenously with a 100 c.c. syringe on the second
injection. One patient had poliomyelitis, the other malignant measles. Both were
adults. I have duplicated this on myself to prove no after effects.
Intramuscular injections are always 500 mg to 1 c.c. solution. With continuous
intravenous injections of large amounts of ascorbic acid, at least one gram of
calcium gluconate must be added to the fluids each day. This is done because we
have found that massive doses of ascorbic acid pulls free calcium ions from the
vicinity of the platelets or from the calcium-prothrombin complex as the lactone
ring of dehydroascorbic acid is opened. The first sign of calcium ion loss is
"nose bleeding". This differs from the nosebleed found, at times, in cases of
chicken pox or measles. Here it represents frank scurvy from vitamin C
deficiency. The pathology being "Capillary
fragility".[66]
A new treatment for burns
has been outlined, which if followed will eliminate skin grafting and plastic
surgery. It is probably too simple to gain early acceptance. The literature has
been suggesting the value of ascorbic acid in burns for many years. Proper local
application and the amount for systemic usage has been misleading. One only need
see one case properly treated with ascorbic acid to appreciate its importance.
If ascorbic acid can destroy the exotoxin of tetanus, as Jungeblut demonstrated,
it can also destroy the exotoxin of Pseudomonas. Ascorbic acid plays an
important role in maintaining fluid balance in the body. Ruskin pointed out that
the vitamin activates an enzyme arginase, which breaks down the amino acid
arginine, resulting in production of urea which is one key to tissue fluid
balance.
The simple stress of
pregnancy demands supplemental vitamin C. This amount will vary with the
individual. The silver nitrate-urine text will simplify these findings. Vitamin
C seems especially concerned with mesenchymal tissue. When one considers the
demands of the fetus and infant, especially premature babies, it is obvious that
high vitamin C intakes are required during pregnancy because this "parasite"
will drain available "C" from the mother. Greenblatt[67] reports excellent results following the oral
administration of vitamin C in the therapy of habitual abortion. In my own
practice I was able to take women who had had as many as five abortions without
a successful pregnancy and carry them through two and three uneventful
pregnancies with the use of supplemental vitamin C. The German literature is
"stacked" with articles recommending high doses of vitamin C during gestation
because they believe that this substance is of great benefit in influencing the
health of the mother and in preventing infections. The vital contribution of
ascorbic acid to the body tissues can be summed up in the formation and
maintenance of normal intercellular material, especially in the connective
tissue, bones, teeth, and blood vessels. Genetic errors might be prevented if
prospective mothers were advised to take 10 or more grams of ascorbic acid
daily. It is significant that we found in the simple stress of pregnancy, a
normal physiological process, that equivalent requirements paralleled those
found in the rat when under stress. Experiments by King
et al.[68] have shown that the need for supplemental
vitamin C begins with the embryo.
The "scare" factor of large
doses of ascorbic vs. kidney stones has been laid to rest. Since the urine is
usually pH6, one can see that the opening of the lactone ring is a slow process.
This reaction takes place in tissues and is probably regulated by the amount of
glutathione present. The important considerations are that one must have a
concentrated urine, that stasis must be a factor and that the urine must be
alkaline for any appreciable amounts of the crystalloids to precipitate out.
This will never occur with massive ascorbic acid therapy. Furthermore, it has
been shown that the controls in a given experiment had almost as much oxalic
acid spill as did those volunteers taking 9 grams of ascorbic acid
daily.
The quickness of results in
snake bite, spider bite, hornet stings and caterpillar reactions demonstrates
the usefulness in saving lives. It is best to give the vitamin intravenously
with a syringe since bottle preparations are too time consuming. One precaution
must be given. There exist a 2 gram ascorbic acid ampoule, and ironically it is
the only one to my knowledge approved by the Food and Drug Administration, which
might "kill" if used undiluted in a syringe. This lethal factor is due to the
preservatives added. Each ampoule contains 2 grams sodium ascorbate. Vehicle
contains: Monothioglycerol 0.14%; Sodium Formaldehyde Sulfoxylate 0.05%; Methyl
Paraben 0.13%; Propyl Paraben 0.015%. Neutralized to pH6 with Sodium
Bicarbonate; Water for injection q.s. This ampoule can be used intravenously
ONLY when diluted to at least 25 c.c. to one gram. One sometimes will be
confronted with extraordinary allergic and shock symptoms along with acute
respiratory obstruction. In these situation one must employ Benadryl
intravenously and/or intramuscularly and an adrenocortical hormone such as
Decadron. These can be given by a nurse while the ascorbic acid is being
prepared. In their absence a second "syringe" dose of ascorbic acid will
suffice. Fluids by mouth should be given to prevent or correct thirst which all
patients seem to experience.
Large doses of ascorbic
acid do not cause diabetes mellitus in humans as has been suggested. On the
contrary 10 grams daily, by mouth, has proved to be beneficial. The fact that 10
grams will allow them to heal wounds like normal individuals will save many legs
in. the future. Lamden, a biochemist, instigated these fears by
misinterpretation of the results reported by Patterson using the Ketone formula
intravenously in rats.
In surgery the use of
ascorbic acid resolves itself into a "must" situation. The 24 hour frank scurvy
levels should be sufficient evidence to encourage all surgeons to use vitamin C
freely in their fluids. Proper employment of vitamin C by the surgeons will all
but eliminate the post-surgery deaths.
The part very large doses
of ascorbic acid given intravenously over a prolonged period offers a medical
challenge. From cabbage and tomatoes grown in the carbon-14 chambers radioactive
ascorbic acid can be extracted, which can be used in tracer studies. At least
one research team has demonstrated that in cancer all available "C" is mobilized
at the site of the malignancy. Lauber and Rosenfeld reported that "C" is
mobilized from the tissues of the body and selectively concentrated in
traumatized areas. In one hopeless case we administered 17 grams daily for 92
consecutive days without changing the blood or urine levels from that associated
with scurvy. This is the reason we believe a dose range of 100 grams to 300
grams daily by continuous intravenous drip for a period of several months might
prove surprisingly profitable. Blood chemistry should be followed daily with
such an investigation. Schlegel found that even a dose of 1.5 grams a day, by
mouth, would prevent bladder cancer.
Our findings in no less
than 15 cases of barbiturate poisoning suggested that no death should occur from
this error in judgment. We also observed the dramatic effect of 12 grams
intravenously on blood pressure associated with shock. The shock seen in heat
stroke had been corrected by the time the injection was completed. The dose
range used was 500 mg per Kg body weight.
The use of ascorbic acid
with Tolserol in the treatment of Tetanus should be accepted as universal
treatment. Here again the dose must be proper. Our case as reported will serve
as a guide in making these calculations. Ascorbic acid along with
Para-Aminobenzoic acid is curative in Trichinosis. Both drugs are administered
by mouth. It is estimated that at least 5 million cases of chronic Trichinosis
exists in the United States. Just nine days of treatment would return these
individuals to normal. In our cases 10 grams ascorbic acid was given daily and
Para-Aminobenzoic acid was employed in high range. Four to six grams to start
then three grams every 2 hours for eight times. For the remainder of the nine
day schedule it was given 3 grams every two hours during the day and every three
hours during the night.
Ascorbic acid is the drug
of choice in viral hepatitis. The dose used ranges from 400 mg to 600 mg per Kg
body weight, depending on the severity of the disease. It should be given every
8 to 12 hours. Ten grams ascorbic acid daily in divided doses is also given by
mouth. Those under 10 years the usual schedule of at least one gram for each
year of life.
We have reviewed many other
pathological conditions in which ascorbic acid plays an important part in
recovery. To these might be added Cardiovascular Diseases, Hypermenorrhea,
Peptic and Duodenal Ulcers, Post-operative and Radiation Sickness, Rheumatic
Fever, Scarlet Fever, Poliomyelitis, Acute and Chronic Pancreatitis, Tularemia,
Whooping Cough and Tuberculosis. In one case of scarlet fever in which
Penicillin and the Sulfa drugs were showing no improvement, fifty grams ascorbic
acid given intravenously resulted in a dramatic drop in the fever curve to
normal. Here the action of ascorbic acid was not only direct but also as a
synergist. A similar situation was observed in a case of lobar pneumonia. In
another case of purperal sepsis following a criminal abortion the initial dose
of ascorbic acid was 1200 mg per Kg body weight and two subsequent injections
were at the 600 mg level. Along with Penicillin and Sulfadiazine an admission
temperature of 105.4°F. was normal in nine hours. The patient made an uneventful
recovery. In one spectacular case of Black
Widow[69] spider bite in a 3 1/2 year old child, in
coma, one gram calcium gluconate and 4 grams of ascorbic acid was administered
intravenously when first seen in the office. Four grams ascorbic acid was then
given every six hours using a 20 c.c. syringe. She was awake and well in 24
hours. Physical examination showed a comatose child with a rigid abdomen. The
area about the umbilicus was red and indurated, suggesting a strangulated
hernia. With a 4 power lens, fang marks were in evidence. Thirty hours after
starting the vitamin C therapy the child expelled a large amount of dark clotted
blood. There was no other residual. A review of the literature confirmed that
this individual has been the only one to survive with such findings; the others
were reported at autopsy. Ten grams vitamin C and 200 mg to 400 mg vitamin B-6,
by mouth, daily will "shield" one from mosquito bites. Twenty percent will also
require 100 mg vitamin B-6 intramuscularly each week.
Vitamin C plays a very
important role in general nutrition. Deficiency of this substance in sufficient
amounts can be a factor in loss of appetite, loss of weight or failure to grow,
muscular weakness, anemia and various skin lesions. The relationship between
vitamin C and the health of the gums and teeth has long been recognized. Laboratory studies on gum-teeth connective tissue have
reaffirmed this relationship.[70] Our son who will be 19 in July has never
developed a tooth cavity. Since age 10 he has received at least 10 grams
ascorbic acid, daily, by mouth. Before age 10 the amount given was on a sliding
scale.[71]
Ascorbic acid must be given
by needle to bring about quick reversal of various "insults" to the human body.
We have found that doses must range from 350 mg to 1200 mg per Kg body weight.
Under 400 mg per Kg of body weight the injection can be made with a syringe
provided the vitamin is buffered with sodium bicarbonate with Sodium Bisulfite
added. Above 400 mg doses per Kg body weight, and a particular ampoule described
in this summary, the vitamin must be diluted to at least 18 c.c. of 5 per cent
dextrose in water, saline in water or Ringer's solution. Many times Adenosine
5-Monophosphate, 25 mg in children and 50 to 100 mg in adults, given
intramuscularly, is necessary to achieve results. The aqueous solution is more
effective for quick results, although Adenosine in Gel can be employed. In
debilitated individuals or when the pathology is serious, Desoxycorticosterone
Acetate (DCA), aqueous solution, must also be added to the schedule. Usually 2.5
mg for children and 5 mg for adults is the daily intramuscular dose required.
Sudden swelling of the feet indicates abnormal sensitivity and the drug must be
discontinued.
It must be remembered when
using ascorbic acid that experiments on man are the only experiments which can
give positive evidence of therapeutic action in man. Likewise, the use of
ascorbic acid in human pathology must follow the Law of Mass Action: "In
reversible reactions, the extent of chemical change is proportional to the
active masses of the interacting substance."
Reidsville, N.C.
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Case History:
Pesticide Poisoning
Three boys ranging in years
from age seven to age 12 were walking along a North Carolina Highway. They were
caught in the "spray" of a dusting airplane. The youngest boy had been covered
by the other two and so received little exposure. He was seen in the emergency
room of the local hospital and sent home. The other two boys had different
physicians. One lad age 12, under our care, was given 10 grams of ascorbic acid
with a 50 c.c. syringe every 8 hours. The concentration was one gram for each 5
c.c. diluent. He was returned home on the second hospital day. The third boy
received supportive treatment but did not receive ascorbic acid. His body was
something to see. The spray had produced an allergic dermatitis as well as a
chemical burn. He died on the 5th hospital
day.
Case History: Nasal
Diphtheria
Three children, living in
the same neighborhood, developed nasal diphtheria. All three children had
different physicians. A little girl under our care was given 10 grams ascorbic
acid, intravenously, with a 50 c.c. syringe every 8 hours for the first 24 hours
and then every 12 hours for two times. She was then put on one gram ascorbic
acid every two hours by mouth. She lived and is now a graduate nurse. The other
children did not receive ascorbic acid and both died. Our young patient also
received 40,000 units diphtheria antitoxin which was given intraperitoneal. The
other children also were administered the antitoxin.
Case History:
Poliomyelitis
Although we were able to
cure many cases of polio with massive doses of ascorbic acid, one single
instance demonstrates the value of vitamin C. Two brothers were sick with
poliomyelitis. These two boys were given 10 and 12 grams of ascorbic acid,
according to weight, intravenously with a 50 c.c. syringe, every eight hours for
4 times and then every 12 hours for 4 times. They also were given one gram every
two hours by mouth around the clock. They made complete recovery and both were
athletic stars in high school and college. A third child, a neighbor, under the
care of another physician received no ascorbic acid. This child also lived. The
young lady is still wearing braces.
Case History: Acute
Virus Infection representing Deadly Virus
Syndrome
Cases with
paralysis are extremely interesting in as much as they
challenge diagnostic prowess. One of our cases, a female age 58, demonstrated
three different types. She entered the hospital because of a convulsive seizure.
She had had a lingering cold for ten days. She experienced
three additional convulsive seizures after hospital admission. The temperature
was 100.8°F. pulse 140, respirations 32. She was extremely restless. Twenty-four
grams ascorbic acid in 360 c.c. 5D water was given intravenously for three times
at 8 hour intervals. One gram calcium gluconate was added to the first and third
bottle. Twenty four hours following admission and 72 grams ascorbic acid in the
blood stream, patient was awake and rational but completely paralyzed, right arm
and leg. Five grams ascorbic acid was given in fruit juice every 6 hours by
mouth and 6 grams ascorbic acid along with a B complex preparation was given
intravenously, daily for eight additional days. The right arm and leg returned
to normal 48 hours after admission. Classical pellagra was also
corrected during this hospital stay.
Case History:
Repeating virus infection
This case proved that
adequate ascorbic acid therapy must be continued long enough to
destroy all virus bodies, otherwise the infection will recur. In 1960, I treated
a seven year old boy, off and on, over a period of six weeks, for influenza like
symptoms. Therapy included one of the mold derived drugs, sulfadiazine and 5 to
10 grams ascorbic acid by mouth. On three different occasions this treatment
schedule was dramatically effective. When the child became ill for the fourth
time, the administration of the above antibiotics and oral vitamin C had no
reversing effect. On the third day of this illness the child suddenly became
lethargic and just as suddenly to frank stupor. The temperature which had been
running low grade was now 102.6°F. At this paint all oral medication was
discontinued. I immediately gave six grams of ascorbic acid intravenously with a
30 c.c. syringe. He was awake and asking, "what happened" in 5 minutes. Six
grams ascorbic acid was given in 4 hours and then at 6 hour intervals for two
additional doses. The recovery was complete in 24 hours and remained so.
Ascorbic acid was again started by mouth giving 5 grams in juice every 8 hours.
After one week, this was reduced to the usual daily "take" of seven grams. I had
ample opportunity to observe this case--the child was our
son.
Case History: Snake
bite
Child of 4 years was struck
on the lower leg by a large highland moccasin at 7:00 P.M., while at play in the
yard of her country home. Seen in the emergency room of the local hospital at
7:30 P.M., the child was vomiting, was crying because of severe pain in her leg,
which she held with both hands above the "fang marks". Fever was 99.0°F. Four
grams of ascorbic acid was given intravenously at 7:35 P.M. with a 20 c.c.
syringe. The following 25 minutes were taken to follow a skin test on
anti-venom. At this time and before the anti-venom was administered the child
had stopped vomiting, she had stopped crying and was sitting on the emergency
room table, laughing and drinking a glass of orange juice. She commented: "Come
on, Daddy, I'm all right now, let's go home." She was allowed to return home
with the understanding that her father would give me a report, by phone, each
hour during the night. This he did. His report, each time, was that the child
was sleeping as usual and that except for moderate swelling to the "calf of the
leg", appeared normal. Seen in the office at 10:00 A.M. the following morning
she still demonstrated the small amount of swelling of her leg and had 1/2
degree fever. She was given a second dose of 4 grams of ascorbic acid
intravenously. Seen at 5 P.M. she had no fever but the swelling remained
constant. There was no pain. The following day, 38 hours after being bitten, she
was completely normal. Since this was our first case of snake bite treated with
vitamin C, we elected to give an additional 4 grams of ascorbic acid on this
visit. No other antibiotics were given and none was required. Since she had had
a booster injection of tetanus toxoid in recent months, none was given at this
time.
Comparing this to an
earlier case of snake bite in a 16 year old girl, struck by a moccasin of about
the same size, as gauged from the fang marks, on the hand while pulling tobacco
plants, and who was hospitalized for three weeks. She was given 3 doses of
anti-venom. The arm was compressed continuously with magnesium sulfate solution.
Swelling was four times that of the opposite arm and striae developed over the
entire surface. This patient received no vitamin C other than that found in a
regular hospital diet. Morphine was required to control pain. (We no
longer use anti-venom.)
Case History: An
Insidious virus
This was a child of 18
months. She was seen in the driveway to my home at about 7:00 P.M. The history
was brief. The child had strangled on food while eating supper. A cursory
examination given in the front seat of an automobile revealed an extremely
restless, whining child. The temperature was 98.6°F. (axillary 10
minutes-corrected). There was no obstruction to the air-ways. We did elicit the
information, that the child had had a cold for several days. We
also learned that the child's mother had taken her for a long stroller ride the
previous daywhich in this area was damp and cold. Frankly the impulse
to send the child home was great.
Remembering that I had seen
children dead within 30 minutes to two hours after hospital
admission without treatment, I decided to buy some time. The Uncle was asked to
take the child to the emergency room of the local hospital. The nurse on duty
was given an order to take a rectal temperature and then give a fleets enema. If
the results proved unsatisfactory, she was to repeat the procedure in 30 minutes
using a normal saline solution. Approximately 45 minutes after leaving my home,
the intern on duty reported by phone, that the child was unconscious to a point
where she responded only to pain stimuli. The enema had not been given. Going at
once to the hospital, conditions were found as described. The little patient was
lying motionless on the examining table. Using a suitable size rectal tube I
gave the enema with good results. The stool was normal. Rectal temperature taken
at the hospital was 98.4°F. (corrected). The pulse rate was 152 per minute and
respirations were 32 per minute. It was impossible to visualize the throat
because the mouth was "locked" as one finds after stimulation in lockjaw. Our
impression was that the virus had now entered the brain.
Thirty grams of ascorbic
acid, in divided doses, was given intramuscularly over a period of 36 hours.
Crystalline penicillin was started on the second day and 300,000 units were
administered in divided doses over the next three days. This was added to block
secondary invaders. One hour following admission we applied a 4 x 4 gauze,
saturated with tap water, to the child's lips. The sucking reflex was still
intact, but the child immediately strangled. Turning the child head down, the
small amount of water ran from its nostrils. Now it was clear. It was this
"bulbar phenomenon" that was at play when the child was eating
supper. The nursing log showed the temperature to be 99.0°F. (corrected) 1 1/2
hours after admission and 1 1/2 hours later it was recorded at 100.0°F.
(corrected). The nursing log at this time read: "Shows no sign of
consciousness." Temperature was 101.2°F. four hours after admission and was
102.4°F. (corrected) after six hours. Now the nursing log read: "Baby swallowed
water without difficulty." At this point the temperature curve started back down
and by 7:00 A.M. (11 hours following admission) the child was alert and taking
water freely from a spoon. Twenty eight hours after the first injection of
ascorbic acid the temperature was normal. Water, milk and orange juice were now
taken from a bottle. Cecon (liquid vitamin C) was given by mouth. Discharge was
on the 5th hospital day. The initial low fever recording indicated that
the child was dying; after ascorbic acid therapy she began to respond,
thus the fever. After the virus was killed, the temperature returned to
normal.
Case History:
Monoxide Poisoning
State highway employee
carried into my office in unconscious condition. He was a known diabetic. The
breathing was not Kussmaul type and his skin was warm and dry. We elicited the
information that he had been found in the cab of his truck with the windows
closed and the engine running. It was a cold Winter day. Entertaining a
diagnosis of Monoxide intoxication we immediately gave 12 grams ascorbic acid
with a 50 c.c. syringe using a 20 gauge needle. (We employ a 20 G. needle when
using a 50 c.c. syringe; 21 G needle for a 30 c.c. syringe; 22 G needle for a 20
c.c. syringe and a 23 G needle for a 10 c.c. syringe. This assists in
controlling the rate of flow which is important, especially, in young children).
Within 10 minutes the patient was awake, sitting up on the edge of the examining
table, rubbing his eyes and saving: "Doc, what in the world am I doing up here
in your office." He returned to his place of employment within 45
minutes.
Case History #1:
Acute Virus qancarditis
A five year old boy was
admitted to the local hospital with history of having a "relapse" after recovery
from measles. The physical findings showed a thready and feeble
pulse. A distinct rub was in evidence by auscultation. The EKG showed RS-T
deviations. The temperature was 105°F.. Ascorbic acid calculated at 400 mg per
Kg body weight was given intravenously with a syringe. Within two hours the
picture had almost reverted to normal. Injection of Vitamin C was repeated in 6
hours and again at 12 hours. A fourth injection was given after 24 hours
although the patient was clinically well. The child returned home on the 4th
hospital day.
Case History #2:
Acute Virus Pancarditis following a deep
cold
The findings approximated
those of case #1. The parents elected to take the child to Duke Medical Center.
Six grams of ascorbic acid was given by needle before starting the trip to the
hospital which was 60 miles away. Upon arrival at the Medical Center the child
had made such dramatic response to the single injection of ascorbic acid that
the parents were tempted to return home. The receiving physician questioned the
sickness of the child as being out of proportion to that relayed by me during
our telephone conversation. The parents assured the physician that the child had
been seriously ill, but that the change came about after receiving the ascorbic
acid. Although 50 grams (25 ampoules) of ascorbic acid was sent along with the
parents, none was given because the physician in charge stated that he would be
afraid to give that size dose, intravenously, to a child. The fact that we had
administered six grams, which represented a dose of 400 mg per Kg body weight,
apparently had no influence. Laboratory findings, however, confirmed our
impression and the child was hospitalized for two weeks. Two additional
injections of vitamin C would have cured the child in 24
hours.
Case History: Acute
Pancreatitis
Adult Male seen in the
emergency room of local hospital complaining of severe, agonizing pain in the
epigastrium which radiated to the back. Nausea and vomiting were present. Serum
amylase studies showed a concentration of 345. This was the 4th such attack
experienced by this patient. Sixty grams ascorbic acid in 700 c.c. Dextrose in
water was given intravenously. 20 mg Pantapon was given in the emergency room.
No additional opiates were required. The patient made an uneventful recovery. He
was placed on 10 grams ascorbic acid by mouth and has not had a recurrence in
almost 5 years. He has, however, developed mild diabetes mellitus which is now
controlled with diet and vitamin C.
END
I am in full agreement with
Lancelot Hogben who said, "A scientific idea must live dangerously or die of
inanition. Science thrives on daring generalizations. There is nothing
particularly scientific about excessive caution. Cautious explorers do not cross
the Atlantic of truth."
Frederick R. Klenner, M.D.,
F.C.C.P.
Reidsville, North Carolina
A native of Pennsylvania,
Dr. Klenner attended St. Vincent and St. Francis College, where
he received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in
biology. He graduated magna cum laude and was awarded a
teaching fellowship there. He was also awarded the college
medal for scholastic philosophy. There followed another
teaching fellowship in chemistry at Catholic University, Where
he pursued studies for a doctorate in physiology.
Dr. Klenner then 'migrated'
to North Carolina and Duke University to continue his studies. He arrived in
time to use his knowledge in physiology and chemistry to free the nervous system
of the frog for a symposium by immersing the animal in 10% nitric acid. Taken in
tow by Dr. Pearse, chairman of the department, he was finally persuaded to enter
the school of medicine. He completed his studies at Duke University and received
his medical degree in 1936.
Dr. Klenner served three
years in post graduate hospital training before embarking on a private practice
in medicine. Although specializing in diseases of the chest, he continued to do
general practice because of the opportunities it afforded for observations in
medicine. His patients were as enthusiastic as he in playing guinea pigs to
study the action of ascorbic acid. The first massive doses of ascorbic acid he
gave to himself. Each time something new appeared on the horizon he took the
same amount of ascorbic acid to study its effects so as to come up with the
answers.
Dr. Klenner's list of
honors and professional society affiliations is tremendous. He is listed in a
flock of various "Who's Who" registers. He has published many scientific papers
throughout his scientific career.
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