isoascorbic-acid and Scurvy

isoascorbic-acid has been researched along with Scurvy* in 4 studies

Other Studies

4 other study(ies) available for isoascorbic-acid and Scurvy

ArticleYear
Reduction of dehydroerythorbic acid in vitamin C-deficient guinea pigs.
    Journal of nutritional science and vitaminology, 2001, Volume: 47, Issue:4

    A reduction of dehydroerythorbic acid (DERA) to erythorbic acid (ERA) in vitamin C-deficient guinea pigs was evaluated and compared with that of dehydroascorbic acid (DASA). Thirty-six guinea pigs were fed with vitamin C-deficient diets for 18 days. On day 19, the guinea pigs were divided into four groups for the administration of 100 mg of DERA, ERA, ascorbic acid (ASA), or DASA every day. After 12 days of oral administration, the concentration of DERA, ERA, ASA, and DASA in the liver, adrenal, spleen, kidney, and plasma of guinea pigs was determined by HPLC. A recovery from scurvy was measured in terms of weight gain and serum alkaline phosphatase activity. All four groups showed similar recovery, indicating that the oral administration of relatively high concentrations of DERA reversed the effects of scurvy in vitamin C-deficient guinea pigs. In spite of DERA or DASA administration, ERA or ASA was mainly detected in the tissues. The reduction ratios of DEAR and DASA were similar (approximately 80%) in all tissues except spleen. These results suggest that both DASA and DERA are taken up and reduced to ASA or ERA in vivo.

    Topics: Animals; Antioxidants; Ascorbic Acid; Ascorbic Acid Deficiency; Dehydroascorbic Acid; Guinea Pigs; Male; Scurvy

2001
The search for the specific factor in scurvy.
    Perspectives in biology and medicine, 1981,Spring, Volume: 24, Issue:3

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Collagen; History, 18th Century; History, Ancient; Humans; Hydroxyproline; Procollagen-Proline Dioxygenase; Scurvy

1981
The antiscorbutic action of L-ascorbic acid and D-isoascorbic acid (erythorbic acid) in the guinea pig.
    The American journal of clinical nutrition, 1981, Volume: 34, Issue:1

    Female guinea pigs were fed a scorbutigenic diet supplemented with either L-ascorbic acid or D-isoascorbic acid or combinations of these. Their responses were judged by changes in body weight, serum alkaline phosphatase levels, wound healing, and tooth structure. Large additions (100 mg daily) of D-isoascorbic acid to the scorbutigenic diet resulted in normal growth over a 7-wk period and normal serum alkaline phosphatase levels, tooth structure development, and collagen formation after wounding. The addition of 0.5 or 5.0 mg of L-ascorbic acid to this high D-isoascorbic diet improved neither growth rate nor collagen deposition during wound healing. On the basis of changes in tooth structure, D-isoascorbic acid has 1/20 the potency of L-ascorbic acid. Its effect is additive to subminimal maintenance levels of L-ascorbic acid implying that there is no competitive inhibition in the utilization of the two compounds. The relatively weak activity of D-isoascorbic acid is probably due to poor transport to the tissues and ineffective binding to functional sites. This explains why the onset of scurvy is much more rapid after withdrawal of D-isoascorbic acid from the diet when it had been the sole antiscorbutic dietary constituent. It is concluded that D-isoascorbic acid is a "weakly" antiscorbutic agent on the basis that it is both poorly absorbed and retained by the tissue; that in fact it may, to the degree that it is taken up by the tissues and retained, be equal in antiscorbutic potency to L-ascorbic acid.

    Topics: Alkaline Phosphatase; Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Female; Growth; Guinea Pigs; Incisor; Scurvy; Stereoisomerism; Structure-Activity Relationship; Wound Healing

1981
Biochemical studies on d-araboascorbic acid in vitamin C deficiency.
    The Journal of vitaminology, 1955, Jul-10, Volume: 1, Issue:3

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Ascorbic Acid Deficiency; Body Fluids; Humans; Scurvy; Urine; Vitamins

1955