Previously in this space, we discussed vitamin B12 and the important roles it plays on multiple levels in supporting our health. A deficiency of B12 can lead to all sorts of problems, starting on a basic level with tiredness, weakness, constipation and anemia, while a long-term deficiency can ultimately lead to nerve damage and dementia, even gait disturbance, among other life-changing conditions to be avoided. Maintaining proper vitamin B12 levels can be accomplished with a healthy diet that includes meat, fish, and dairy products such as milk (for starters), along with a complement of dietary supplements containing vitamin B12, as needed. However, let's bring to the mix a mention of a possible B12-deficiency problem that could arise if you are using medications to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), otherwise known as heartburn or acid reflux. Symptoms include indigestion, a burning pain in the lower chest typically accompanied by a sour taste in the mouth, and, sometimes, vomiting, per livestrong.com. Such medications, whether over the counter or prescription, work by blocking stomach acid and other secretions, when those active stomach ingredients are needed to help our bodies absorb vitamin B12, per mayoclinic.org. Here's why, as stated previously in this space: Once B12 is ingested, it binds with the protein in food and then is released to be distributed in our body by the activity of the stomach's hydrochloric acid and gastric protease. . . . Free vitamin B12 then combines with intrinsic factor, a glycoprotein secreted by the stomach's parietal cells, and the resulting complex undergoes absorption within the distal ileum by receptor-mediated endocytosis, per National Institutes of Health (NIH). OK, that's some head-scratching scientific verbiage, but hopefully you get our drift – that anything which interferes with your stomach's role in getting B12 out to everywhere it needs to go in our body carries with it a risk worth looking into.
Could Heartburn Relief Affect Your Body's B12 Absorption?
Published by Wonder Laboratories on Dec 10th 2018
Previously in this space, we discussed vitamin B12 and the important roles it plays on multiple levels in supporting our health. A deficiency of B12 can lead to all sorts of problems, starting on a basic level with tiredness, weakness, constipation and anemia, while a long-term deficiency can ultimately lead to nerve damage and dementia, even gait disturbance, among other life-changing conditions to be avoided. Maintaining proper vitamin B12 levels can be accomplished with a healthy diet that includes meat, fish, and dairy products such as milk (for starters), along with a complement of dietary supplements containing vitamin B12, as needed. However, let's bring to the mix a mention of a possible B12-deficiency problem that could arise if you are using medications to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), otherwise known as heartburn or acid reflux. Symptoms include indigestion, a burning pain in the lower chest typically accompanied by a sour taste in the mouth, and, sometimes, vomiting, per livestrong.com. Such medications, whether over the counter or prescription, work by blocking stomach acid and other secretions, when those active stomach ingredients are needed to help our bodies absorb vitamin B12, per mayoclinic.org. Here's why, as stated previously in this space: Once B12 is ingested, it binds with the protein in food and then is released to be distributed in our body by the activity of the stomach's hydrochloric acid and gastric protease. . . . Free vitamin B12 then combines with intrinsic factor, a glycoprotein secreted by the stomach's parietal cells, and the resulting complex undergoes absorption within the distal ileum by receptor-mediated endocytosis, per National Institutes of Health (NIH). OK, that's some head-scratching scientific verbiage, but hopefully you get our drift – that anything which interferes with your stomach's role in getting B12 out to everywhere it needs to go in our body carries with it a risk worth looking into.