David
Co-Founder
Have you been tested for Vitamin B12 deficiency? If so, were you deficient?
I would count it as deficient, especially by Japanese standards which are about double the rest of the world after they raised it. Don't let your doctor brush you off, we're seeing a lot of people around here who are deficient and feel a lot better after taking proper supplementation.This is before I had surgery. Does "slightly low" count as deficient? I had to specifically request the testing. My doc told me to take B12 vitamins.
After surgery I brought it up again and he brushed me off again. I will be interested to see what my blood tests show in a month (I will request the B12 test again).
Are you just taking oral supplements? If so, have you thought about getting some injections as a loading dose so you aren't borderline and going back and forth between deficient and not deficient?I regularly give blood and am tested for B12. Sometimes I am deficient, other times not. I do notice that when I am short on the B12 my hands have the pins and needles feeling. That's usually when I forget to take the supplements for a few days.
Interesting! What makes you feel your bowel has compensated and is absorbing in areas other than the terminal ileum?Mine was interesting - I was deficient after my first resection - had another 3 since then. My remaining bowel has compensated and can now absorb all on its own. I still take at least 1000 mcg per day, though.
Everyone is different. But that your gait was affected tells me you had a pretty severe, chronic case. If you didn't have other symptoms, count yourself lucky and make sure you keep those levels up from now onMy question is - should I feel any great reaction to the b12 injections other than now being able to walk in a straight line!?
Stories like yours concern me a lot You should NEVER get to the point that you're experiencing any sort of symptoms of deficiency, especially after only missing a couple oral doses. That tells me you're getting nowhere near enough B12. The body can store up to 5 years worth of B12 and you have only enough for a couple days, if that. It's more likely that you're technically deficient and your body is high in [wiki]methylmalonic acid[/wiki] and [wiki]homocysteine[/wiki] and I'm worried one day that's going to catch up to you. You want more than enough in the bank, not so little that you're regularly over drafting. This is the problem with high oral doses if the deficiency isn't dietary related; it's very difficult to get above to optimal levels since only 1-2% of it is absorbed.I am not on injections for my B12 deficiency, but I do feel a difference between being B12 deficient and having good B12 levels. I take a 2500mcg sublingual tablet once a day, where the B12 is absorbed underneath your tongue. They had me try that before they put me on the injections, and it worked well enough to keep doing it. When I forget to take them for a few days, my chronic fatigue gets worse, my vision and balance get worse (dizzyness), and overall I don't feel as well. A lot of people take B12 purely to have more energy instead of caffeine...my husband takes one every morning to start his day.
Stories like yours concern me a lot You should NEVER get to the point that you're experiencing any sort of symptoms of deficiency, especially after only missing a couple oral doses. That tells me you're getting nowhere near enough B12. The body can store up to 5 years worth of B12 and you have only enough for a couple days, if that. It's more likely that you're technically deficient and your body is high in [wiki]methylmalonic acid[/wiki] and [wiki]homocysteine[/wiki] and I'm worried one day that's going to catch up to you. You want more than enough in the bank, not so little that you're regularly over drafting. This is the problem with high oral doses if the deficiency isn't dietary related; it's very difficult to get above to optimal levels since only 1-2% of it is absorbed.
You're almost assuredly deficient. If they're not willing to supplement based upon that number, make them test your methylmalonic acid and homocysteine levels. I will just about guarantee they're raised. That you're 2 points above the low end of the reference range and they didn't test those levels or supplement you tells me your doctors don't understand vitamin b12. Please take this into your own hands as B12 deficiency is very bad news. Please print out this paper and take it to your doctors.I'm supposedly not low, my last result was 147 and the low bar was 145 - so I was close to being low but not close enough for the docs to say I am low.
Please don't take any offense in me correcting you but this isn't quite right either (PLEASE correct me anytime I make a mistake as all I care about is people here getting correct information )THE BILE HELPS transfer the b12 to the intestines to absorb, then transfer via blood to muscles... tissues etc...