Vegetarians and Baby Boomers Need B12
Vitamin B12 deficiency is more common than
doctors once thought, and experts advise that those most at risk
-- vegetarians and older adults -- be sure to take supplemental
forms of the vitamin.
Vitamin B12 is essential for maintaining healthy nerve cells
and red blood cells; a deficiency in the vitamin can cause symptoms
ranging from the subtle, including fatigue and mild dizziness,
to the more severe, including nerve damage, anemia and dementia.
At one time, doctors thought that the only manifestation of B12
deficiency was an uncommon condition called pernicious anemia,
explained Dr. Anthony L. Komaroff, a professor of medicine at
Harvard Medical School in Boston. People with pernicious anemia
lack a stomach protein called intrinsic factor, which allows the
intestines to absorb vitamin B12.
But it has become clear in recent years that B12 deficiency is
a much more widespread problem, Komaroff noted in a recent interview.
Unlike most vitamins, B12 occurs naturally only in animal products,
including meat, poultry, fish and -- in lesser amounts -- eggs
and dairy. Because of this, vegetarians and especially vegans
-- who avoid all animal products, including dairy -- may have
low stores of the vitamin.
The same is true of adults older than 50, as many have a thinning
in the stomach lining that prevents the proper release of digestive
acids. Stomach acids, Komaroff explained, are essential for "shaking
loose" vitamin B12 from its food source, allowing it to be absorbed.
Research indicates that one-fifth of Americans older than 60
have low levels of B12 in their blood, according to the August
issue of the Harvard Health Letter, which Komaroff edits.
It's important, Komaroff said, for vegetarians and older adults
to get vitamin B12 through supplements, including multivitamins
and fortified cereals. The crystalline form of B12 in pills and
cereals is actually better absorbed than that found in animal
products, and its absorption is not hindered by the lack of stomach
acids in some older adults.
Vegetarian and vegan women who breastfeed should be especially
careful to get enough vitamin B12, according to Komaroff. Deficiency
in an infant can cause irreversible damage to the nervous system
and serious developmental problems.
In general, women who breastfeed are advised to get 2.8 micrograms
(g) of B12 per day, slightly more than the 2.4 g recommended for
all adults.
Vitamins, particularly those formulated for vegetarians, often
contain many times the recommended daily amount of B12. Though
it's dangerous to take certain vitamins in such high doses, Komaroff
noted, there is no evidence that excess B12 carries health risks.
SOURCE: Harvard Health Letter, August 2005.
Reference
Source 89
August
10, 2005
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