Sublingual vitamin B12 info


Vitamin B12 was first isolated from a liver extract in 1948. Up until that point, eating large amounts of raw liver on a daily basis was the only treatment available for people suffering from pernicious anemia. In 1955, the chemical structure of vitamin B12 was determined at Oxford University and in the same year, a group at Harvard succeeded in making vitamin B12 synthetically.

sublingual vitamin b12

Theoretically we should be able to get our daily requirement of vitamin B12 from the foods we eat. However this is not always possible. Vitamin B12 resides in the soil and nourishes the plants as they grow and store trace amounts in their leaves. Then as animals eat the plants, the vitamin B12 gets transferred to the animals where it is stored in their liver and other body tissues. In this manner, it makes it to the top of the food chain to humans who get their vitamin B12 by eating either the animals themselves or the products of the animals, like eggs, milk, butter and cheese. Over time our soil has become depleted of much of the vitamin B12. Vegetarians who eat no meat and vegans who eat no animal products period are at a higher risk for deficiency because they are eating fruits and vegetables grown in depleted soil. Even those who eat animal products such as liver, eggs, fish, and dairy products may not be getting adequate vitamin B12 in their diet due to the depletion of nutrients in the soil.

DO Any of these items sound Familiar?

1. Do you find that you just don't have the energy that you used to?

2. Do you have difficulty remembering things, even though your memory has traditionally been good?

3. Do you get angry or frustrated by situations that wouldn't have bothered you ten years ago?

4. Do you feel down or lonely on a more frequent basis?

5. Are you under increasing stress and pressure?

6. Do you sleep poorly or fail to get at least seven and a half hours of sleep consistently?

7. Do you often feel tired or listless?

8. Do you increasingly rely on caffeine to make it through the day?

9. Is it harder for you to concentrate than it used to be?

Sublingual Vitamin B12 Function:

Even if you are getting an adequate intake of vitamin B12 daily there are other issues that come into play. You see, vitamin B12 requires the most delicate and fragile balance of conditions to be properly digested. The journey vitamin B12 takes from being bound to a protein source (the meat or dairy product you eat) to being stored in the liver until it's needed for use, is a seemingly straightforward process, but unfortuanately there's a lot of potential for things to go wrong. The interuption of one or any combination of those intricate steps places a person at risk of developing vitamin B12 deficiency and suffer with vitamin B12 deficiency symptoms. Most B vitamins are quickly absorbed in the first few inches of the small intestine, but vitamin B12 requires more care. It must interact with the bacteria in your intestines for several hours before it is finally absorbed into your liver. Vitamin B12 deficiency is due to the inability of the intestine to absorb the vitamin. As we get older or begin relying on antiacids to curb heartburn, our stomachs produce less gastic acid. Without gastric acid the vitamin B12 is never released from it's protein. Other factors are the imperfect enviroment we create for ourselves. Overeating, eating too quickly without properly chewing or eating high-sugar or starchy foods with our protien sources. Medications such as antiacid, antibolic, laxatives, antihistamine and stress all can contribute to vitamin B12 deficiency. The solution to getting our daily requirement of vitamin B12 is sublingual vitamin B12.

The Medical community seems to be in agreement that vitamin B12 shots are effective. Doctors have relied on B12 shots for years to treat serious vitamin B12 deficiency symptoms. Even though most of the B12 vitamin is lost in the urine with large intramuscular doses of vitamin B12, injections have traditionally been the best method of treament. Of course they can also be painful, inconvenient, expensive and embarrassing. Oral tablets on the other hand are generally agreed to be ineffective. While there are many B12 vitamin tablets available on the market, it is poorly absorbed into the body by oral means. Some studies show that on average, blood levels of vitamin B12 increase by only 1.2 percent after passing through the digestive system.

A New Way To Supplement: The Sublingual Method.

There is a better way. Rather than going through the digestive system, where vitamin B12 easily gets lost, the sublingual method allows you to place a sublingual vitamin B12 tablet under your tongue where it can speed the sublingual B12 vitamins directly into your bloodstream. This is the same way nitroglycerin is administered to heart patients. Tests show that over 90 percent of the vitamin B12 makes it into the bloodstream.



 

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