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Vitamin C reduces liver inflammation, which improves vitamin D production – Dec 2014

Does Vitamin C Deficiency Promote Fatty Liver Disease Development?

Received: 5 November 2014; Accepted: 15 November 2014 / Published: 1 December 2014
Nutrients 2014, 6(12), 5473-5499; doi:10.3390/nu6125473 (registering DOI)
David Højland Ipsen, Pernille Tveden-Nyborg and Jens Lykkesfeldt jopl at sund.ku.dk
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nutrition and Liver Disease)


Obesity and the subsequent reprogramming of the white adipose tissue are linked to human disease-complexes including metabolic syndrome and concurrent non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). The dietary imposed dyslipidemia promotes redox imbalance by the generation of excess levels of reactive oxygen species and induces adipocyte dysfunction and reprogramming, leading to a low grade systemic inflammation and ectopic lipid deposition, e.g., in the liver, hereby promoting a vicious circle in which dietary factors initiate a metabolic change that further exacerbates the negative consequences of an adverse life-style. Large epidemiological studies and findings from controlled in vivo animal studies have provided evidence supporting an association between poor vitamin C (VitC) status and propagation of life-style associated diseases. In addition, overweight per se has been shown to result in reduced plasma VitC, and the distribution of body fat in obesity has been shown to have an inverse relationship with VitC plasma levels. Recently, a number of epidemiological studies have indicated a VitC intake below the recommended daily allowance (RDA) in NAFLD-patients, suggesting an association between dietary habits, disease and VitC deficiency. In the general population, VitC deficiency (defined as a plasma concentration below 23 μM) affects around 10% of adults, however, this prevalence is increased by an adverse life-style, deficiency potentially playing a broader role in disease progression in specific subgroups. This review discusses the currently available data from human surveys and experimental models in search of a putative role of VitC deficiency in the development of NAFLD and NASH.


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Attached files

ID Name Comment Uploaded Size Downloads
4662 Vit C Fatty Liver studies.jpg admin 01 Dec, 2014 155.10 Kb 2504
4661 Vit C Fatty liver.jpg admin 01 Dec, 2014 144.40 Kb 2334
4660 Vit C liver intervention.jpg admin 01 Dec, 2014 185.41 Kb 2442
4659 T1C.jpg admin 01 Dec, 2014 48.19 Kb 1948
4658 T1B.jpg admin 01 Dec, 2014 154.99 Kb 2232
4657 T1A.jpg admin 01 Dec, 2014 152.96 Kb 2500
4656 Vit C liver.jpg admin 01 Dec, 2014 83.07 Kb 8173
4655 Vit C and Fatty liver.pdf admin 01 Dec, 2014 593.00 Kb 1172