Vitamin C gets most of the attention, but in whole foods it rarely appears alone. It comes packaged with bioflavonoids like hesperidin and rutin—often referred to as the “C complex.” For powerlifters, this pairing makes a difference.
The C complex supports how vitamin C is used in the body. Bioflavonoids may help protect vitamin C from oxidation, extend its activity, and assist with transport into tissues. That has practical implications for recovery, connective tissue health, and overall resilience with heavy training. Vitamin C plays a role in collagen formation, which supports tendons and ligaments—structures that take repeated stress with the bar—and also supports skin integrity and repair. Including the full complex can make that support more consistent.
Hesperidin and rutin are two well-known bioflavonoids, but they are part of a much larger family—thousands of related compounds found across fruits and plants. Whole foods naturally provide a broad spectrum of these compounds rather than a single isolated input. That spectrum is part of how the body typically encounters and uses vitamin C.
When selecting a supplement, look beyond plain ascorbic acid. Options that include citrus bioflavonoids, or that pair vitamin C with hesperidin, rutin, and related compounds, can provide a more complete profile. Dosing does not need to be extreme—consistency and completeness tend to matter more than megadosing a single isolated compound.
For powerlifters pushing volume and intensity, small edges add up. The C complex offers a more rounded approach to supporting recovery, tissue integrity, and day-to-day training output.
Exclusive Powerlifting.com content drawing on published research and industry expertise to ensure accuracy and relevance for powerlifters. Certain statements in this article represent the author’s perspective and may not reflect the views of Powerlifting.com.
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