| Literature DB >> 28410599 |
Abstract
The vitamin C deficiency disease scurvy is characterised by musculoskeletal pain and recent epidemiological evidence has indicated an association between suboptimal vitamin C status and spinal pain. Furthermore, accumulating evidence indicates that vitamin C administration can exhibit analgesic properties in some clinical conditions. The prevalence of hypovitaminosis C and vitamin C deficiency is high in various patient groups, such as surgical/trauma, infectious diseases and cancer patients. A number of recent clinical studies have shown that vitamin C administration to patients with chronic regional pain syndrome decreases their symptoms. Acute herpetic and post-herpetic neuralgia is also diminished with high dose vitamin C administration. Furthermore, cancer-related pain is decreased with high dose vitamin C, contributing to enhanced patient quality of life. A number of mechanisms have been proposed for vitamin C's analgesic properties. Herein we propose a novel analgesic mechanism for vitamin C; as a cofactor for the biosynthesis of amidated opioid peptides. It is well established that vitamin C participates in the amidation of peptides, through acting as a cofactor for peptidyl-glycine α-amidating monooxygenase, the only enzyme known to amidate the carboxy terminal residue of neuropeptides and peptide hormones. Support for our proposed mechanism comes from studies which show a decreased requirement for opioid analgesics in surgical and cancer patients administered high dose vitamin C. Overall, vitamin C appears to be a safe and effective adjunctive therapy for acute and chronic pain relief in specific patient groups.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer quality of life; Chronic regional pain syndrome; Opioid requirements; Post-herpetic neuralgia; Vitamin C
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28410599 PMCID: PMC5391567 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-017-1179-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
The effect of vitamin C on complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) and other orthopedic pain
| Study type | Intervention | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Placebo controlled RCT | ||
| Wrist fractures [ | i. Placebo (N = 167) | i. 20–42% CRPS (at 6 weeks), 5–16% CRPS (at 1 year) |
| ii. 500 mg/day oral vitamin C (N = 169) for 50 days | ii. 40–42% CRPS (at 6 weeks), 6–16% CRPS (at 1 year) | |
| Wrist fractures [ | i. Placebo (N = 99) | i. 10% CRPS |
| ii. 200 mg/day oral vitamin C (N = 96) | ii. 4% CRPS | |
| iii. 500 mg/day oral vitamin C (N = 144) | iii. 2% CRPS* | |
| iv. 1.5 g/day oral vitamin C (N = 118) for 50 days | iv. 2% CRPS* | |
| Wrist fractures [ | i. Placebo (N = 63) | i. 22% CRPS |
| ii. 500 mg/day oral vitamin C (N = 52) for 50 days | ii. 7% CRPS* (at 1 year follow up) | |
| Hip/knee osteoarthritis [ | Placebo or 1 g/day oral vitamin C (N = 133) | 5% ↓ pain (VAS)* |
| Controlled prospective | ||
| Foot and ankle surgery [ | i. Control (N = 235) | i. 10% CRPS |
| ii. 1 g/day oral vitamin C (N = 185) for 45 days | ii. 2% CRPS* | |
| Wrist fracture surgery [ | i. Control (N = 100) | i. 10% CRPS |
| ii. 1 g/day oral vitamin C (N = 95) for 45 days | ii. 2% CRPS* (at 90 day follow up) | |
| Paget’s disease of bone [ | i. Calcitonin (N = 13) | i. Pain relief in 85%, marked ↓ pain in 31% |
| ii. Calcitonin + 3 g/day vitamin C (N = 11) for 2 weeks | ii. Pain relief in 73%, marked ↓ pain in 45% | |
| Uncontrolled prospective | ||
| Arthritic joint replacement surgery [ | 500 mg/day oral vitamin C (N = 34) for 50 days | 0% CRPS cases |
| Paget’s disease of bone [ | 3 g/day oral vitamin C (N = 16) for 2 weeks | ↓ Pain in 50%, no pain in 20% (within 5-7 days) |
| Case report | ||
| Rheumatoid arthritis [ | 50 g IV vitamin C twice/week for 4 weeks | Before: 100% pain (QLQ) |
| After: 0% pain | ||
IV intravenous, VAS visual analog scale, QLQ quality of life questionnaire
* P < 0.05
aStudy was included in CRPS meta-analysis [48–52]
The effect of vitamin C on acute and chronic viral-associated pain
| Study type | Intervention | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Placebo controlled RCT | ||
| Herpes Zoster [ | i. Placebo infusion (N = 42) | i. 4.2 ↓ VAS, 57% PHN incidence |
| ii. 5 g IV vitamin C (N = 45) on days 1, 3, 5 | ii. ≥5.6 ↓ VAS*, 31% PHN incidence* (at 8 and 16 week follow up) | |
| Postherpetic neuralgia [ | i. Placebo infusion (N = 20) | i. 0.9 ↓ NRS, 10% PGIC |
| ii. 50 mg IV vitamin C/kg body weight (max dose 2.5 g/day) (N = 21) three times over 5 days | ii. 3.1 ↓ NRS*, 62% PGIC* (at 7 day follow up) | |
| Uncontrolled prospective | ||
| Herpes Zoster [ | 7.5 g IV vitamin C (N = 64) 2–4 times/week for 2 weeks | Baseline: 58% pain (VAS) |
| Week 2: 22% pain | ||
| Week 12: 6% pain | ||
| Chikungunya virus—moderate to severe pain [ | H2O2 + 25–50 g IV vitamin C (N = 56) single infusion | Before: 80% pain (NRS) |
| After: 20% pain, no pain in 9% of patients | ||
| Case report | ||
| Parvovirus B19 viremia—chronic arthralgia [ | i. 10 g/day oral vitamin C for 10 days | i. Before: 30% pain (VAS) |
| ii. 10 g/day oral vitamin C for 3 weeks | ii. Before: 40% pain (VAS) | |
| Chikungunya virus—severe joint pain [ | 100 g/day IV vitamin C for 2 days | Pain resolved within 24 h |
| Refractory herpes zoster-associated pain [ | 4 g/day IV vitamin C for 5 days | Before: 70% pain (VAS) |
| After: 0% pain (at 3 month follow up) | ||
| Herpes zoster—severe dermatological pain [ | Cantharidin + 7.5 g IV vitamin C every 2 days for 2 weeks | Before: 80% pain (NAS) |
| After: 40% pain (within 2 weeks), | ||
| Acute herpetic neuralgia [ | 15 g IV vitamin C every 2 days for 12 days | Before: 80% pain (VAS) |
| After: 0% pain (within 8 days) | ||
| Acute herpetic neuralgia [ | 15 g IV vitamin C every 2 days for 16 days | Before: 100% pain (VAS) |
| After: 0% pain (within 12 days) | ||
| Postherpetic neuralgia [ | 2.5 g IV vitamin C every 2 days for 5 days | Before: 73% pain (NRS) |
| After: 0% pain (within 7 days and at 3 month follow up) | ||
IV intravenous, NAS numerical analogue scale, NRS numeric rating scale, PCIG patient global impression of change, PHN postherpetic neuralgia, VAS visual analogue scale
* P < 0.05
The effect of vitamin C on cancer-related pain
| Study type | Intervention | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Uncontrolled prospective | ||
| Advanced cancer [ | 0.8–3 g IV vitamin C/kg body weight (N = 17) 4 days/week for 4 weeks | Before: 36% pain (N = 17) |
| Advanced cancer [ | 25–100 g IV vitamin C (N = 60) twice weekly for 4 weeks | Before: 18% pain |
| Terminal cancer [ | 10 g IV vitamin C (N = 39) twice over 1 week 4 g/day oral vitamin C for 1 week | Before: 30% pain |
| Controlled retrospective | ||
| Bone metastases [ | i. Control (N = 9) | i. ↑ pain (VAS) |
| ii. Chemotherapy (N = 15) | ii. 0–80% ↓ pain | |
| iii. 2.5 g IV vitamin C (N = 15) during pain | iii. 0–100% ↓ pain, mean 50% ↓ pain | |
| Breast cancer [ | i. Control (N = 72) | i. 15% pain |
| ii. 7.5 g IV vitamin C (N = 53) once weekly for ≥ 4 weeks | ii. 10% pain* (intensity of complaints during adjuvant therapy) | |
| Uncontrolled retrospective | ||
| Bone metastases [ | 2.5 g IV vitamin C (N = 11) once weekly for 3–10 weeks | 0–100% ↓ pain (VAS), mean 49% ↓ pain |
| Case report | ||
| Breast cancer [ | 50 g IV vitamin C twice weekly for 4 weeks | Before: 17% pain |
| Terminal cancer [ | 30 g/day IV vitamin C for 1 week | Before: 17% pain |
| Metastatic breast cancer [ | 10 g/day oral vitamin C for 550 days | Pain relief for >1 year |
| Breast cancer with skeletal metastases—severe pain [ | 5 g/day IV vitamin C for 7 days | Complete ↓ bone pain from day 4 |
| Bladder cancer with skeletal metastases—intense pain [ | 10 g/day IV vitamin C for 10 days | Dramatic ↓ bone pain |
| Breast cancer with osteolytic metastases—severe bone pain [ | 10 g/day IV vitamin C for 7 days | Complete ↓ bone pain |
EORTC QLQ European Organisation for the Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire, IV intravenous, VAS visual analogue scale
* P < 0.05
The effect of vitamin C on opioid analgesic requirements
| Study type | Intervention | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Placebo controlled RCT | ||
| Laparoscopic colectomy—for colon cancer [ | i. Placebo (N = 48) | i. 16 mg morphine at 2 h, frequency of rescue analgesia: 1.4 |
| ii. 50 mg IV vitamin C/kg body weight (N = 49) prior to surgery | ii. 14 mg morphine at 2 h*, frequency of rescue analgesia: 0.8*, ↓ pain at 2, 6, 24 h (NRS)* | |
| Uvulopalatopharyngoplasty with tonsillectomy [ | i. Placebo (N = 20) | i. 46 mg pethidine, first dose at 3 h, number of requests: 1.3 |
| ii. 3 g IV vitamin C (N = 20) 30 min into surgery | ii. 6 mg pethidine*, first dose at 12 h*, number of requests: 0.2*, | |
| Cholecystectomy [ | i. Placebo (N = 40) | i. 23 mg morphine |
| ii. 2 g oral vitamin C (N = 40) prior to surgery | ii. 16 mg morphine* (at 24 h follow up) | |
| Uncontrolled prospective | ||
| Range of malignancies [ | 2 g oral vitamin C (N = 17) for 3 days | Before: 360 mg/day opioids |
| Controlled retrospective | ||
| Terminal cancer [ | i. Control (N = 19) | i. 79% required narcotics |
| ii. 0.5–3 g/day oral vitamin C (N = 6) | ii. 50% required narcotics | |
| iii. 5–30 g/day oral vitamin C (N = 6) | iii. 17% required narcotics | |
| Case report | ||
| Intolerable fibrosarcoma-related pain [ | 10 g/day vitamin C for 19 days | Better control of pain by opiates |
| Breast cancer with skeletal metastases—severe pain [ | 5 g/day IV vitamin C for 7 days | No further need for opiates (from day 4) |
| 8 g/day oral vitamin C for 70 days | ||
| Bladder cancer with skeletal metastases—intense pain inadequately controlled by morphine [ | 10 g/day IV vitamin C for 10 days | No further need for opiates |
| 10 g/day oral vitamin C for 24 days | ||
IV intravenous, NRS numeric rating scale, VAS visual analogue scale
* P < 0.05
Fig. 1Proposed synthesis of endomorphin-1 by the vitamin C-dependent enzyme peptidylglycine α-amidating monooxygenase (PAM). The enzyme comprises a peptidylglycine α-hydroxylating monooxygenase (PHM) domain, which converts glycine-extended peptides into a hydroxyglycine intermediate, and a peptidyl α-hydroxyglycine α-amidating lyase (PAL) domain, which converts the hydroxyglycine intermediate into an amidated product. AA ascorbic acid, DHA dehydroascorbic acid