Sepsis -- your grandparents called it blood poisoning, and it's a nasty and often fatal condition. Treatment is arduous and often fails.
UNLESS you are treated with high-dose intravenous vitamin C (20,000 mg - 100,000 mg daily) or, many reports suggest, with 6 or so grams of lipospheric or liposomal vitamin C per day, orally.
ThIs link covers a bit of history on the use of vitamin C to cure scurvy and viruses, and contains two YouTube videos -- only one of which (the second one) is still available. The vid is well worth watching; it's about a family that saved their husband / father's life by fighting to get a hospital to give high-dose intravenous C to the patient, which was finally begun at the point where the hospital was planning to turn off his life support because he was at death's door and couldn't POSSIBLY get well. (The man had swine flu and leukemia, not sepsis).
Direct YouTube link for the embedded video: Vitamin C: the miracle Swine Flu cure
Speaking as someone who gets kidney stones, this bears mentioning: https://www.healthline.com/health/kidney-disease/vitamin-c-and-kidney-health
I have directly correlated Vitamin C supplementation with the occurrence of stones. I wouldn't wish stones on my worst enemy!
Did the victim c you take have calcium?
Often does espescially fortified orange juice v
No...just straight C. The kidney stone issue was repeatable, as well, until I figured it out. Others can take as much C as they want...it's only those with a problem forming stones. I've had hundreds over the years.
Ah ok - good to know!