Antioxidants (Aug 2022)

Vitamin C Deficiency in Blood Samples of COVID-19 Patients

  • Tobias Sinnberg,
  • Christa Lichtensteiger,
  • Katharina Hill-Mündel,
  • Christian Leischner,
  • Heike Niessner,
  • Christian Busch,
  • Olga Renner,
  • Nina Wyss,
  • Lukas Flatz,
  • Ulrich M. Lauer,
  • Ludwig E. Hoelzle,
  • Donatus Nohr,
  • Markus Burkard,
  • Luigi Marongiu,
  • Sascha Venturelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox11081580
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. 1580

Abstract

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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is the most notable pandemic of the modern era. A relationship between ascorbate (vitamin C) and COVID-19 severity is well known, whereas the role of other vitamins is less understood. The present study compared the blood levels of four vitamins in a cohort of COVID-19 patients with different severities and uninfected individuals. Serum concentrations of ascorbate, calcidiol, retinol, and α-tocopherol were measured in a cohort of 74 COVID-19 patients and 8 uninfected volunteers. The blood levels were statistically compared and additional co-morbidity factors were considered. COVID-19 patients had significantly lower plasma ascorbate levels than the controls (p-value p-values p-value ≥ 0.093). Survival analysis showed that plasma ascorbate below 11.4 µM was associated with a lengthy hospitalization and a high risk of death. The results indicated that COVID-19 cases had depleted blood ascorbate associated with poor medical conditions, confirming the role of this vitamin in the outcome of COVID-19 infection.

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