Peter Attia· MD
and the l-ascorbic acid which is meant to be it's thought to be the form that penetrates the best and is the most effective once it's penetrated it needs to be stabilized
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
and the l-ascorbic acid which is meant to be it's thought to be the form that penetrates the best and is the most effective once it's penetrated it needs to be stabilized
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if you can find a vitamin C serum that has a higher quality vehicle to make sure the bioavailability of the vitamin C gets to your skin, that product is going to have additional, you know, associated antioxidants that are going to be very useful and helpful.
And so, the relatively more expensive formulations are being produced by manufacturers that are doing all sorts of manufacturing flips and tricks to try and stabilize that vitamin C.
And in that year, all of the relatively inexpensive vitamin C serums are going to degrade and not actually have any bioavailability when that vitamin C is applied to the skin.
And in that year, all of the relatively inexpensive vitamin C serums are going to degrade and not actually have any bioavailability when that vitamin C is applied to the skin.