Check your vitamin C supplement bottle right now. If it says 1000mg, you're taking the wrong dose — and if you train, it may be actively slowing your progress. Switch to 200–500mg/day. That's where your blood saturates; everything above is mostly urine.
Think of vitamin C like filling a glass of water. Your bloodstream is the glass — it holds about 200–400mg worth before it's full. Pour in 1000mg and the extra spills straight out in your urine. Worse: those "spilled" antioxidants don't just do nothing. In muscle tissue they mop up the oxidative stress signals your training needs to build you stronger.
That's the general answer. Your stack is different.
Check your whole stackThe supplement everyone takes in the wrong dose — and why 1000mg might be cancelling your gym gains.
Check your vitamin C bottle right now. If it says 1000mg, you're taking more than your body can use — and if you train, it may be actively slowing your progress.
Switch to 200–500mg/day (split across two doses if you're taking 400mg+). That's where blood plasma saturates — everything above that is excreted, not absorbed.
Takes 30 seconds. No equipment needed.
The Protocol
| Population | Dose | Timing | Form | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| General adult | 200–500mg/day | With meals; split if >200mg | Ascorbic acid | Levine 1996, NIH ODS |
| Smokers | 200–400mg/day | With meals | Ascorbic acid | NIH ODS 2021 |
| Athletes (resistance/endurance) | ≤200mg/day; cap at 500mg | NOT post-workout | Ascorbic acid | Paulsen 2014; Bjørnsen 2016 |
| Wound healing / surgical | 200–500mg/day | With meals, continue 4–8 weeks post-op | Ascorbic acid | Hujoel 2021 |
| Extreme endurance athletes (cold prevention) | 200–500mg/day | Daily during competition/training block | Ascorbic acid | Hemilä & Chalker 2013 |
| IV — critical care (clinical only) | 50 mg/kg every 6 hours, 96hrs | Continuous IV | IV Ascorbate | CITRIS-ALI 2019 |
Safety
≥1000mg/day prematurely quenches exercise-induced ROS, blunting PGC-1α (mitochondrial biogenesis) and p70S6K (muscle protein synthesis) signalling. Multiple RCTs confirm 50–64% blunted FFM gains vs placebo. Severity: Moderate-High. Action: Cap at 200–500mg/day; avoid post-workout timing.
≥1000mg/day significantly increases urinary oxalate excretion (~20–33%), doubling kidney stone risk in men. Severity: Moderate (High in prior stone history). Action: Stay below 500mg/day; high fluid intake if supplementing.
In G6PD-deficient patients, high-dose IV vitamin C acts as a pro-oxidant, triggering severe acute hemolysis and acute kidney injury. Severity: Severe. Action: G6PD screening required before any IV protocol.
Vitamin C markedly enhances non-heme iron absorption. In hereditary hemochromatosis, this accelerates iron overload. Severity: Moderate. Action: Avoid supplemental vitamin C.
Antioxidants theoretically protect cancer cells from intended oxidative damage. Severity: Moderate-Severe. Action: Only under oncologist supervision — do not self-initiate.
Beneficial for iron-deficient individuals taking non-heme iron. Moderate interaction. Action: Use intentionally if iron-deficient; avoid if hemochromatosis.
Antioxidant combinations may reduce lipid-lowering efficacy. Severity: Moderate. Action: Flag to prescribing physician if taking high-dose vitamin C with statins.
Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL): 2,000mg/day (US Food and Nutrition Board). Main concerns: GI osmotic diarrhea and oxalate excretion above this threshold. No systemic toxicity in healthy adults at oral doses.
Conviction
Deficiency prevention and wound healing earn HIGH conviction. Cold duration reduction is real but modest (8–14%). Exercise blunting is HIGH conviction but a harm signal, not an efficacy claim. Cold prevention for the general population is LOW.
For exercise blunting: A long-term RCT (6-month, MRI-assessed, N>200) testing 200–400mg vitamin C vs placebo in recreational athletes to establish the exact inflection point where adaptation blunting begins. For sepsis: A phase III mortality-powered RCT (N>1000) stratifying by baseline serum ascorbate levels with mortality as primary endpoint.
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