Collagen Vitamin C
Collagen and Vitamin C are seen as synergistic for skin and joints, but results require long-term consistency and realistic expectations.
- Adults pairing collagen peptides with vitamin C for skin firmness support
- Those seeking vitamin C to help support the body's natural collagen synthesis
- Active individuals using collagen and vitamin C to support joint and connective tissue
- Skin Health — 82% of verified reviews
About Codeage - Collagen Vitamin C
Codeage Collagen Vitamin C combines hydrolyzed collagen peptides with vitamin C, a cofactor that supports the body's natural collagen synthesis processes. Designed for adults seeking to support skin elasticity, joint comfort, and connective tissue integrity, this formulation pairs two nutrients that work together in structural protein metabolism.
Why It's Worth Considering: Pairing hydrolyzed collagen peptides with vitamin C addresses a key biochemical relationship — vitamin C is required for hydroxylation steps in collagen formation, making the combination more functionally complete than collagen alone.
Why Gabriel Recommends This
How to Take
Who Benefits
Best For
- Adults pairing collagen peptides with vitamin C for skin firmness support
- Those seeking vitamin C to help support the body's natural collagen synthesis
- Active individuals using collagen and vitamin C to support joint and connective tissue
- People incorporating daily collagen with vitamin C for hair and nail structure support
Cautions
- History of kidney stones (oxalate type) — use buffered form
- Hemochromatosis (iron overload — C enhances iron absorption)
- G6PD deficiency at very high IV doses
- Taking blood thinners at doses above 2g/day
What to Expect
Compare Vitamin C Forms
| Feature | Ascorbic Acid | Buffered (Ascorbate) | Liposomal | Ester-C |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bioavailability | Good (standard) | Good (gentler) | Excellent (2-3x) | Good |
| GI Tolerance | May cause acidity | Very gentle | Excellent | Gentle |
| Best For | Budget, general use | Sensitive stomachs | Maximum absorption | Sustained release |
| Price | $ | $ | $$$ | $$ |
Frequently Taken Together
Frequently Asked Questions
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For maintenance, 500-1000mg daily is sufficient. For immune support during illness, 2000-4000mg in divided doses. The body can only absorb ~200-500mg at once, so split large doses throughout the day. Liposomal forms bypass this limit with 2-3x better absorption.
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For most people, standard ascorbic acid at 500-1000mg is sufficient. Liposomal vitamin C is worth the premium if you need higher therapeutic doses (2000mg+) without GI distress, or if you have absorption issues. Studies show liposomal C achieves 2-3x higher blood levels than standard forms.
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Vitamin C is water-soluble and excess is excreted in urine. The main risk of high doses (3000mg+) is GI distress (diarrhea, cramping) and increased oxalate production, which may contribute to kidney stones in susceptible individuals. The 'bowel tolerance' test — increasing dose until loose stools, then backing off — is a common practitioner approach.
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Meta-analyses show regular vitamin C supplementation reduces cold duration by 8% in adults and 14% in children, and reduces severity. It does NOT prevent colds in most people, but it does in those under physical stress (athletes, military). Taking vitamin C after cold symptoms start has minimal benefit — daily prevention is key.
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Take with food to reduce potential stomach acidity. Morning dosing is common since vitamin C may mildly increase alertness. If taking large doses (1000mg+), split into 2-3 doses throughout the day for better absorption and sustained blood levels.
Real Reviews. Real Sources.
Compatibility Guide
Works Well With
Take Separately From
No significant interactions identified. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Research Behind This
Practitioner Insights
Who This Is For
✓ Great For
⚠ Important Notes
† These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
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