What is Scurvy?
25-10-2024
09:48 AM
1 min read

Overview:
A once-common ailment from the 15th century, scurvy, is making an unexpected comeback in the 21st century.
About Scurvy:
- It is a disease caused by a significant lack of vitamin C (ascorbic acid) in your diet.
- Scurvy has been known since ancient Greek and Egyptian times.
- Causes:
- Humans cannot synthesize vitamin C. It needs to come from external food sources, especially fruits and vegetables or fortified foods.
- Thus, scurvy is caused by not eating enough fresh fruits and vegetables.
- Also, cooking destroys some of the vitamin C found in food.
- Symptoms:
- It can include anemia, exhaustion, spontaneous bleeding, limb pain, swelling, and sometimes ulceration of the gums and loss of teeth.
- It can be fatal if left untreated.
- Treatment: It is treatable with oral or intravenous vitamin C supplements.
Importance of Vitamin C:
- It’s responsible for the development, growth, and healing of your skin, bones, and connective tissue.
- In addition, you need vitamin C for your blood vessels to function properly.
- Vitamin C helps maintain your teeth and gums.
- It helps your body absorb iron, which it needs to make red blood cells.
- Vitamin C also helps heal burns and other wounds.
- Vitamin C is an antioxidant, meaning it protects your cells against damage from free radicals.
- Free radicals are byproducts of normal cell activity which participate in chemical reactions within cells. Some of these reactions can cause damage over your lifetime.

Q1: What are Vitamins?
Vitamins are organic compounds that people need in small quantities. Each has a different role in maintaining health and bodily function. Each organism has different vitamin requirements. For example, humans need to get vitamin C from their diets — while dogs can produce all the vitamin C that they need.
News: 15th Century Disease 'Scurvy' Is Making A Comeback, Say Canadian Doctors