Sublingual Vitamin B12 And Folic
Acid
Sublingual
B12 and folic acid are designed to improve absorption by
letting a tablet dissolve under your tongue. Vitamin B12 and
folic acid function together in such metabolic processes as the
methylation of choline and amino acid
conversion.
It is
recommended that a person not take individual supplements
without first taking a very good multivitamin mineral. Then you
can supplement that with sublingual B12 and folic acid. You
cannot put up the walls and roof of a house unless a foundation
is
properly laid first.
Singular
supplementation can actually create deficiencies. For example,
if you are only taking one of a single B vitamin and are not
getting the whole complex of the B vitamins, you can cause a
deficiency in the one that has not been supplemented. If you
take calcium and do not take magnesium along with it, then you
can create a calcium imbalance. Get the picture? So take your
multivitamin first and then take your sublingual B12 and folic
acid.
Why are sublingual B12 and folic acid so
very important? There are really two
reasons:
• There are
many drugs that people now take which serve to deplete them or
that interfere with their absorption.
• If you are deficient in either
of these two things, it can go undetected and lead to great
damage and suffering.
Sublingual B12 and folic acid are addressed
together because you cannot supplement one without also
supplementing the other. Here are the reasons
why:
• If a
Vitamin B12 deficiency exists and just the folic acid is taken,
some of the clues and blood changes may be masked indicating a
B12 deficiency. This can allow progressive and irreversible
brain damage, spinal cord damage and damage to the peripheral
nerves. Also, in order to use Vitamin B12 properly, folic acid
must be present.
• Most of the same factors help
to contribute to deficiencies of Vitamin B12 and folic
acid.
Most people
with stomach and other GI tract disturbances are at risk from
being deficient in Vitamin B12 and folic acid, no matter if it
be from inflammatory diseases, parasites, low stomach acid,
intestinal malabsorption, chronic diarrhea, tapeworms,
gastrectomy, or the depletion of the “intrinsic factor”. All in
all, there are twelve different inherited disorders that affect
transport, absorption or intracellular metabolism of Vitamin
B12.
As a person
ages, they become greater risk factors because the absorption
of B12 is known to decrease as the person gets older. They also
may be low in folic acid, calcium, iron and Vitamin B6 which
all help to contribute to the depletion of
B12.
Therefore,
it is wise to take sublingual vitamin b12 folic acid
as they are both needed for the metabolism of homocysteine.
This may contribute to a decrease in both disease and death in
the United States by assisting in reducing the amount of
accumulated homocysteine in the blood.
|