Abstract
Objectives: There is almost no information regarding the vitamin C status of patients treated in Canadian and American hospitals. We determined the prevalence and predictors of vitamin C deficiency in patients hospitalized on the acute-care wards of a Canadian teaching hospital, and tracked their plasma vitamin C concentrations while they were there.
Methods: This was a population-based cross-sectional and time course survey of 149 medical patients shortly after admission to a university teaching hospital. The procedure for sample handling, storage and analysis was validated by measuring the vitamin C concentrations of a reference sample of 141 presumably well nourished people and comparing the results with published norms.
Results: In keeping with published norms, 13% of people in the reference group had a subnormal vitamin C concentration (<28.4 μmol/L) and 3% were vitamin C deficient (<11.4 μmol/L). By contrast, 60% of hospitalized patients had a subnormal vitamin C concentration and 19% were deficient. A history of inadequate nutrition or failure to use a vitamin supplement prior to admission, low serum albumin, and male sex predicted plasma vitamin C deficiency, whereas use of a vitamin supplement prior to admission was associated with adequate vitamin C status in hospital. In a second measurement, obtained in 52 patients after an average of 17 days in hospital, vitamin C status had not improved.
Conclusions: Vitamin C deficiency is prevalent and sustained in patients in a Canadian teaching hospital. The abnormality can be prevented by providing a diet sufficient in vitamin C or by prescribing a multiple vitamin tablet.
This study was supported by a grant from the Lotte and John Hecht Memorial Foundation and a Faculty of Medicine summer research bursary award to RG. We are indebted to Kris Rosadiuk and Line Robitaille for technical work, and to the nurses on 7 West and 7 Northwest for their enthusiastic cooperation.
Notes
Presented at Experimental Biology 2007, Washington DC, 28 and 30 April, 2007 (FASEB J 21:A104, 2007).