I mean to help, but if it’s no help, please ignore.
I appreciate. I know you wanted to give your particular experience to help. Was however a bid disconcerted about the claim, ascorbic acid would rob calcium from bones, which it doesn't. Calcium homeostasis in serum is tightly maintained, so that if there is not enough calcium absorbed from diet or supplements, it will indeed leach calcium from bones. But nothing intrinsically due to ascorbic acid, instead because of little calcium absorption from intake. And you already confirmed.
I can FEEL the difference in this form vs. any other. (How can I feel this, you may ask? Well, I have a weird combination of genes which makes me the canary in the mine on a lot of things - in this case, I have a Vitamin D receptor defect, which makes calcium very critical to me, especially so before I had my genes mapped, and I also have genetic hypertension
That individual experience is completely reasonable. You feel the leaching, from something which wouldn't be felt or experienced by any other without the vitamin D receptor defect. Which hinders the absorption of calcium. Serum calcium still may show normal, because it leached from the bones.
What was incongruent to me was your statement just before the above quote:
Yes, you are taking a lot of vitamin C, BUT it's not in the active FORM! You should never take ascorbic acid in high doses because it will rob calcium out of your bones to be put in its active form (thus you should take mineral ascorbates (the active form)! ( take calcium citrate and magnesium citrate 1:1 ratio because citrate is non stone-forming, this IS an alkaline mineral form of Vitamin C
Because ascorbic acid is the active oral form of vitamin C, as well as mineral ascorbate with slower absorption kinetics. From your experience of getting too little calcium from intake, you can not conclude, this would apply to anyone else, without the same vitamin D receptor defect. Hindering calcium absorption to begin with.
I take D2 by IU units - 5,000/day. Idk how that converts to mg. Just wondered if you tested if that was enough D you’re taking.
I take in average 8,000 IU vitamin D3 per day (the D2 form is misadvised, because of worse bioavailability). My serum 25(OH)D3 during the last 16 years have been 70 ng/ml in average. If I calculate it right, that's about 175 nmol/L.
Since you take substantially less, and a less bioavailable form, that of course raises the question, are you getting enough Vitamin D3, to negate the vitamin D receptor defect? - Hindering calcium absorption?
Did I mention that you listed ubiquinone which is not the active form of ubiquinol? If you can afford it you can buy a bloodtest online to see if your CoQ10 levels are high enough…
Normal serum levels are 0.8-1.4 µg/ml, some consider above 3.5 as therapeutic levels. My first test was 3.3 in 2015, concurring with my remission of a walking disability from PAD. My second test was 7 in 2019, after my remission of constant PEMs.
I had the unique experience, when starting with CoQ10, that above 160 mg/d it ceased angina like chest pains (occurring with mental or physical stress). 80 mg/d Ubiquinol had the same effect. I supplemented both in various ratios, but in average I stand at 40 mg/d of Ubiquinol and 110 mg/d Ubiquinone.
I also wrote in that post:
Above including R-5-P, niacinamide, citicoline, pyridoxin, pantethine, adenosyl-, tocotrienols, K2-mk7, etc.
I just didn't type a dozen more bioavailable nutrients out, also taken. But the total intake. Otherwise, the formatting would become even smaller.
But I am saying one assessment of whether or not you are getting enough antioxidants might be crp.
hs-CRP is reacting to every infection with steep increases. In my experience, it's good for detecting acute or chronic low-level infection.
A better marker are oxidation end products, for which I used oxidized LDL. Which declined steadily the last 16 years.
I find it unusual that you would say that you have every antioxidant. I would never say that because science, and me personally, are finding new ones all the time. I am just finding that I need more zinc (also an antioxidant) than the average person. There are so many polyphenols and I am adding new ones to my regime as I discover ones of particular importance to me.
Well, to make it short, this was my average daily supplemental intake for now almost 17 years, beside life-style changes causing remission of PAD, COPD and PEMs:
Vitamins | 40805 | |
Vitamins (fats. soluble) | 1447 | |
Minerals | 15844 | |
Ayurveda min. | 1743 | |
Aminos | 36579 | |
Fats | 19629 | |
Soluble Fiber | 10563 | |
| | |
Plants extracts | 10947 | |
Ayurvedic ext. | 12621 | |
Plants, dried | 14671 | |
Ayur. Plants | 28795 | |
Sugar | 12525 | |
| | |
| 207193 | mg |
Standardized phytonutrients (including polyphenols, flavonoids, tannins, saponins, etc..) were at about 6.7 g/d. I hoped much less intake would have sufficed.
Will answer the remaining questions later, I have to stop for an internist appointment now.