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. 2021 Nov 1;11(11):1166. doi: 10.3390/life11111166

Table 1.

Vitamin C status in patients with COVID-19.

Population
Location
Method Findings Reference
18 patients with ARDS 1
Barcelona, Spain.
Plasma
HPLC-PDA 2
17 patients had <8 µM vitamin C
1 patient had 14 µM vitamin C
[23]
21 ICU 3 patients
Thornton, Colorado, USA
Serum Total cohort (n = 21) had 22 µM vitamin C
(45% were deficient, 70% were hypovitaminosis C)
Survivors (n = 11) had 29 µM vitamin C
Non-Survivors (n = 10) had 15 µM vitamin C
[22]
31 hospitalised patients
51 healthy controlsShanghai, China
Plasma
UHPLC-MS 4
6 patients (no IVC 5) had 11 µM vitamin C
25 patients given 100 mg/kg/day IVC had 76 µM
51 healthy controls had 52 µM vitamin C
[21]
50 symptomatic patients
21 healthy controls
Jigwa, Nigeria
Serum
Colourimetric
Patients had 19 µM vitamin C
Controls had 25 µM vitamin C
[25]
9 ICU patients with severe pneumonia
Liège, Belgium
Patients had 22 µM vitamin C
(reference range: 35–86 µM)
[26]
67 patients with ARDS
Barcelona, Spain
Plasma
HPLC
Mean vitamin C concentration was 8 ± 3 µM
55 patients (82%) had values <23 µM
12 patients (18%) had values <6 µM
[24]

1 ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome, 2 PDA: photo diode array, 3 ICU: intensive care unit, 4 UHPLC-MS: ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, 5 IVC: intravenous vitamin C. Note: vitamin C concentrations <11 µM are considered deficient, and <23 µM are considered hypovitaminosis C.