Vitamin C May Improve Mood

Vitamin C May Improve Mood, According To New Study...



Important New Research On Vitamin C For Cognitive and Mental Function

Supplementation with vitamin C could improve the emotional state of hospitalized patients, according to new research. The trial, published in the journal Nutrition, suggests that increasing vitamin C levels in acutely hospitalized patients, who often have vitamin deficiencies, could measurably improve mood response scores by 34 percent.

"About one in five acute-care patients in our hospital have vitamin C levels so low as to be compatible with scurvy," said research scientists at McGill University, Canada.

"Patients are rarely given vitamin supplements. Most physicians are simply unaware of the problem. Subclinical 
deficiencies of vitamin C and D have each been linked to psychological abnormalities, so we examined that aspect in our clinical trial," they added.

Deficiency
The term hypo-vitaminosis C usually implies a deficiency in vitamin C intake. But in acutely hospitalized patients'
responses to
inflammation could re-direct the vitamin away from important tissues and into immune cells, without
necessarily indicating nutritional
deficiency.

Previous research attempted to pinpoint the metabolic origin of hypo-vitaminosis C in such patients by measuring
their responses to
vitamin C provision.

Because psychological abnormalities are a known feature of vitamin C deficiency, previous research included
assessments of mood. The results showed increased vitamin C was associated with a 35 percent reduction in mood 
disturbance. Although the results from this previous research suggested a strong effect for vitamin C, the mood improvement could not be confirmed due to the set up of the study - and
may have reflected a placebo response.


The new trial investigated vitamin C supplementation therapy in a double-blind clinical trial, to examine if previous 
observations of its effects were replicable in a new patient sample.

Vitamin D was used as an alternative treatment to vitamin C, as vitamin D deficiency is also very common in acutely
hospitalized
patients and has been linked to abnormal mood.

Mood improvement
The researchers reported that vitamin C was associated with a 34 percent improvement in mood scores. The authors noted the results as comparable to previous research suggesting a 35 percent improvement in scores.

No improvement in mood was found with vitamin D supplementation, "thus making the placebo response an unlikely explanation for the effect of vitamin C," according to the researchers.

The researchers note the well-known relationship between vitamin C deficiency and psychological state, adding that
"the observation
that vitamin C provision improved mood in these patients may therefore be considered surprising,
but it is not implausible."


The authors suggested that if sub-normal vitamin C concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid adversely affect brain functions and mood, then their replenishment could improve mood.

"The lack of any effect of vitamin D on mood is good evidence we are not dealing with a placebo response,""This looks like a true biological effect. Our finding definitely requires follow up in larger studies in other centers. "The treatment is safe, simple and cheap, and could have major clinical practice implications." they added.

Source: Nutrition (Published online)
"Vitamin C provision improves mood in acutely hospitalized patients"

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