Vitamin
C 1000 mg TabletSide Effects:
This medication may cause stomach upset, diarrhea, mouth sores, frequent urination
or kidney stones.
Consult your doctor if any of these effects persist or
worsen.
Precautions:
Tell your doctor your medical history, especially of diabetes, blood disorders,
kidney stones and of any drug or food allergies.
Large doses of ascorbic
acid may cause kidney stones. Check with your doctor before taking large
doses without a prescription. Tell your doctor if you are pregnant before
using this medication. Ascorbic acid is considered safe during pregnancy when
not taken excessively. Ascorbic acid is excreted into breast milk. Though
there have been (to date) no reports of harm to nursing infants, consult your
doctor before breast-feeding. 
Generic
Name: ASCORBIC ACID Related:
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Ascorbic Acid 25 mg Tablet - Over the counter
Vitamin C/Rose Hips 250 mg Tablet - Over the counter
Vitamin C 250 mg Tablet - Over the counter
Ascorbic Acid 250 mg Tablet - Over the counter
C-250 250 mg Tablet - Over the counter
C-250/Rose Hips 250 mg Tablet - Over the counter
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Vitamin C/Rose Hips 500 mg Tablet - Over the counter
Vitamin C 500 mg Tablet - Over the counter
Ascorbic Acid 500 mg Tablet - Over the counter
Vitamin C/Acerola 500 mg Tablet - Over the counter
C-500 500 mg Tablet - Over the counter
C-500/Rose Hips 500 mg Tablet - Over the counter
C-Complex 500 mg Tablet - Over the counter
Acerola C 500 mg Tablet - Over the counter
Vitamin C 100 mg Tablet, Chewable - Over the counter
Flavorcee 100 mg Tablet, Chewable - Over the counter
Sunkist Vitamin C 250 mg Tablet, Chewable - Over the counter
Vitamin C 250 mg Tablet, Chewable - Over the counter
BL Vitamin C 250 mg Tablet, Chewable - Over the counter
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Chewable C 250 mg Tablet, Chewable - Over the counter 
mallinckrodt
ascorbic acid ascorbic acid, ascorbic acid injection,
administration, vitamin, doses, deficiency, Pregnancy, intravenous injection,
burns, stool occult blood, scurvy, metabolism, reactions, Sodium.
Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is a water-soluble vitamin. Administration of ascorbic
acid completely reverses the symptoms of ascorbic acid deficiency. Its parenteral
administration is desirable for patients with an acute deficiency or for those
whose absorption of orally ingested ascorbic acid is uncertain. Diabetics, patients
prone to recurrent renal calculi, those undergoing stool occult blood tests, and
those on sodium-restricted diets or anticoagulant therapy should not take excessive
doses of vitamin C over an extended period of time. Pregnancy Category C.' Animal
reproduction studies have not been conducted with Ascorbic Acid Injection. For
intravenous injection, dilution into a large volume parenteral such as Normal
Saline, Water for Injection, or Glucose is recommended to minimize the adverse
reactions associated with intravenous injection. Dahot
ascorbic acid, determination, flow, flow injection, spectrophotometric
determination, pharmaceuticals, reagent, MEMON, mono, preparations, sensitivity,
flow rate, reaction coil, ppm. The effects
of reaction coil length, sample volume, flow rate and the reagent concentration
on the analytical signal are discussed. Satisfactory results were obtained in
the determination of ascorbic acid in Pharmaceutical preparations. A calibration
for ascorbic acid over the range 0-50 ppm was developed and method was applied
with good results (R.S.D value of 0.5% and a sample rate of 200 s/h) to the routine
determination of ascorbic acid in pharmaceutical preparations. An increase in
absorbance with respect to sample volume over the range used was observed, hence
sensitivity was increased two fold with the increase of sample volume. 1475-2891-2-7
ascorbic acid, vitamin, cancer, antioxidant, cells, iron,
intake, reactions, health, supplementation, fruits, vegetables, lipid peroxidation,
inhibition. Most plants and animals synthesize
ascorbic acid for their own requirement. This vitamin was first synthesized by
Haworth and Hirst [4]. Addition of iron to plasma devoid of ascorbic acid resulted
in lipid peroxidation, whereas endogenous and exogenous ascorbic acid was found
to inhibit the lipid oxidation in iron-over loaded human plasma [39]. Ascorbic
acid is known to prevent the oxidation of LDL primarily by scavenging the free
radicals and other reactive oxygen species in the aqueous milieu [41]. Ascorbic
acid is one of the important and essential vitamins for human health. The relation
between ascorbic acid and cancer is still a debatable as the molecular mechanism
underlying anti-carcinogenic activity of ascorbic acid is not clearly elucidated.
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