“B” Good to Yourself
B vitamins are nature’s “feel-good” vitamins, affecting your energy
and vitality as well as your mood and memory. In fact, they are critical to your
health and the functioning of your body.
B vitamins help with:
- Sustained mental energy
- Improved mood
- Mental focus and clarity
- Improved memory
- Nerve sheath repair
The nervous system is your body’s super highway, transporting energy and information
between your brain and cells. B-12 is like the cellular repair team, filling in
potholes and smoothing out the ruts so everything zips along. Not enough B-12 and
the potholes and problems begin to build. And the energy highway slows to a crawl.
You might experience this as brain fog: a lack of focus and memory loss that can
leave you feeling sluggish, irritable, anxious or downright blue. B-12 repairs this
super highway.
Age, stress, digestive problems and other things can prevent B-12 from being absorbed
in your body. This can lead to a B-12 deficiency.
The symptoms of B-12 deficiency
These are just some of the characteristic signs of vitamin B-12 deficiency, according
to the National Institutes of Health.
- Fatigue
- Weakness
- Nausea
- Constipation
- Irritability
- Incontinence
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- Dementia
- Numbness or tingling in the hands and feet
- Loss of appetite
- Paleness
- Shortness of breath
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Untreated, some symptoms can become permanent and lead to severe systemic disorders.
The causes of B-12 deficiency
The dietary absorption of vitamin B-12 is complex. It’s not just a matter
of swallowing a bunch of it (dietary or supplemental) and letting the guts do the
work. There is something called “intrinsic factor” which is made in
certain cells in the stomach that must be present in order for B-12 to be absorbed
at a point in the very end of the small intestine (the ileum).
The main sources of B-12 include meat, eggs and dairy products. Acids in the stomach
separate the B-12 from the protein source, at which point it must combine with intrinsic
factor. The vitamin B-12/intrinsic factor complex travels through the intestine
and is absorbed in the terminal ileum by cells with specific receptors for the complex.
The absorbed complex is then transported via plasma and stored in the liver. The
interruption of one or any combination of these steps places a person at risk of
developing deficiency.
In most cases, vitamin B-12 deficiency is due to an inability of the intestine to
absorb the vitamin, which can happen in several ways:
- As you age (over 40) or become overly reliant on acid-suppressing agents like antacids,
your ability to produce gastric acids in the stomach decreases, meaning that the
B-12 is less likely to be released from its food source.
- An autoimmune or other disease reduces the production or
blocks the action of intrinsic factor, resulting in intestinal malabsorption.
- People with pernicious anemia
have decreased production of intrinsic factor.
- Abdominal surgery reduces
B-12 absorption:
- Gastrectomy eliminates the site of intrinsic factor production
- Blind loop syndrome results in competition for vitamin B-12 by bacterial overgrowth
in the lumen of the small intestine
- Surgical resection of the ileum eliminates the site of vitamin B-12 absorption
- Pancreatic insufficiency such as fish tapeworm infection
and severe Crohn’s disease affect absorption.
Super B to the rescue!
Take the guesswork out of B-12 absorption with Super Sublingual B-12 – formulated
for maximum absorption with its original, patented sublingual delivery system. Plus, it’s the first and only B-12 product to combine both major forms of B-12 with B-6, folic acid and ginseng.
Now, you don’t have to worry about the pain and expense of B-12 injections.
You simply put a great-tasting, quick-dissolving tablet under your tongue; the B-12
is detectable in the bloodstream in as little as 30 minutes!
Next: The TriVita Difference
