Skip navigation

High intake of vitamin C may cut diabetes risk

Eating more fruits and veggies can help prevent the disease, study suggests

  Photo features
Veterinarian drops 155 pounds
Take a look at the amazing before and after photos of the newest Joy Fit Club members.
Image: Sheryl Crow
AP
  Famous breast cancer survivors
Movie stars, athletes and a former First Lady who've all beaten the disease share what inspired them to keep fighting.
Courtesy McCartney family
Miracle baby born twice
See photos from Macie Hope McCartney's incredible surgery and birth.
Image: The Biggest Loser
NBC Universal, Inc.
  Biggest losers: Before and after
See the amazing transformations and pounds shed by the season five contestants.

TODAY's Hoda Kotb explores issues that are important to your family.   Watch the show

20 - worst foods in America12 foods to shrink your stomach11 metabolism myths busted8 breakfast foods to avoid10 pounds to lose without even trying20 saltiest foods exposed
updated 3:28 p.m. ET Aug. 7, 2008

NEW YORK - An abundance of vitamin C in the diet may help lower a person's risk of developing type 2 diabetes, new research suggests.

In a study of middle-aged and older men and women, those with the highest blood levels of vitamin C were significantly less likely to develop diabetes over 12 years than those with the lowest levels, researchers found.

Fruits and vegetables are the main source of vitamin C in Western diets, and blood levels of vitamin C are good markers of fruit and vegetable intake, Dr. Nita G. Forouhi, at the Institute of Metabolic Science at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, England, and colleagues note.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

The current findings "re-endorse the public health message of the beneficial effect of increasing total fruit and vegetable intake," the investigators wrote in Archives of Internal Medicine.

Forouhi's team followed 21,831 healthy men and women who were 40 to 75 years old for the development of type 2 diabetes. At study entry, all participants provided detailed health and lifestyle information, as well as blood samples, which investigators used to determine vitamin C levels.

Over the course of the study, 423 men and 312 women developed type 2 diabetes, an overall rate of 3.2 percent.

According to the investigators, the likelihood of developing diabetes was 62 percent lower in men and women with the highest circulating vitamin C levels, relative to men and women with the lowest vitamin C levels.

Factoring out other characteristics associated with diabetes risk, such as older age, gender, family history, alcohol intake, physical activity, smoking status and body weight did not significantly alter these associations.

These data offer "persuasive evidence of a beneficial effect of vitamin C and fruit and vegetable intake on diabetes risk," Forouhi and colleagues conclude.

Copyright 2008 Reuters. Click for restrictions.