Vitamin C

Vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid, is a water-soluble vitamin found particularly in citrus fruits and green vegetables.

Function
High levels of vitamin C are found in the pituitary, adrenal gland, pancreas, liver, spleen and brain. It is important in mast cell activation disorder for its role in the breakdown of histamine and as a mast cell stabilizer. Vitamin C is also a co-factor in collagen synthesis, making it a potentially important nutrient in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and other connective tissue disorders.

ME/CFS
Dr. Rosamund Vallings, an ME/CFS expert, warns against very high dose mega vitamin C supplementation, stating that: "those with CFS...maybe worsened by high dose vitamin C, as the immune system is often already very overactive, and Vitamin C may aggravate this condition."

Mast cell activation disorder
Numerous studies have found Vitamin C to be inversely correlated with histamine and that the administration of Vitamin C reduces blood histamine levels. It does this potentially through several mechanisms: by inhibiting mast cell production; by increasing diamine oxidase (an enzyme that breaks down histamine); by inhibiting mast cell degranulation (and the release of histamine in the first place), and by inhibiting histidine decarboxylase (the enzyme that forms histamine).

Learn more

 * Linus Pauling Institute Micronutrient Information Center - Vitamin C