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Immune System Dietary Supplementation Vitamins

High C Improves Immune Function

7 years, 3 months ago

13183  0
Posted on Jan 20, 2017, 6 a.m.

Dietary supplementation of Vitamin C may counter aging-related immune cell loss, suggests an animal model.

A potent antioxidant that protects against free radical cellular damage, Vitamin C is essential for the formation and maintenance of collagen and other structural materials in bones, teeth, and capillaries.  Employing a mouse model, a Japanese research group studied the effects of long-term dietary supplementation (20 mg/kg/day or 200 mg/kg/day, for one year) on the thymus, the gland located at the base of the neck that is responsible for the development and differentiation of T-cells – white blood cells key to the immune system.  At the end of the one-year supplementation period, the researchers measured he weight of the thymus organ and the number of immune cells present in the peripheral blood, spleen, and thymus.  The team found that the high-dose vitamin C intake inhibited the aging-related shrinkage of the thymus and maintained thymic output. The study authors write that: “These results suggest that a long-term high-dose intake of [vitamin C] is effective in the maintenance of immune cells, partly through the suppression of age-related thymic involution.”

Uchio R, Hirose Y, Murosaki S, Yamamoto Y, Ishigami A.  “High dietary intake of vitamin C suppresses age-related thymic atrophy and contributes to the maintenance of immune cells in vitamin C-deficient senescence marker protein-30 knockout mice.”  Br J Nutr. 2015 Feb;113(4):603-9.

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