Promising results from an initial clinical trial show that sodium ascorbate – a pH-balanced formulation of vitamin C – is effective in treating sepsis.
Oh, that in no way means it’s not going to be harmful in the context of life-threatening sepsis. One of the things the study authors checked for is evidence of oxalate crystals forming in the kidneys because high dose vitamin C can cause kidney stones.
In healthy kidneys, that’s a survivable inconvenience. In a severely septic patient? Their kidneys are already not working. That could shut them down completely.
(I’m a critical care nurse. First thing I wondered about was kidney stones.)
Oh, that in no way means it’s not going to be harmful in the context of life-threatening sepsis. One of the things the study authors checked for is evidence of oxalate crystals forming in the kidneys because high dose vitamin C can cause kidney stones.
In healthy kidneys, that’s a survivable inconvenience. In a severely septic patient? Their kidneys are already not working. That could shut them down completely.
(I’m a critical care nurse. First thing I wondered about was kidney stones.)