Vitamin B12 Side Effects
The largest
and most complex of all the vitamins, Vitamin B12 is considered unique among all vitamins since it the only one
that contains a metal ion, called cobalt. Because of this, compounds that have B12 activity are sometimes called
cobalamin.
The forms of vitamin B12 used in the human body are methylcobalamin and 5-deoxyadenosyl
cobalamin. These are also the two forms of cobalamin that cyanocobalamin, common in most vitamin B12 supplements,
is converted to.
How does Vitamin B12 function?
The enzyme, methionine synthase is dependent on folate and for this reason, its enzymatic
function require methylcobalamin. Methionine synthase, for its part, is also required in the synthesis of several
important substances found in the human body, specifically amino acids and methionine. Both these substances work
in a number of sites within the DNA and RNA (2) of the cell. Because of this, scientists believe that vitamin B12
may play an important role in cancer prevention and decreasing the risk of cardiovascular diseases.
Vitamin B12 Side Effects
There has never been any toxic or adverse vitamin B12 side effects associated with large intakes
of the vitamin. Whether from food or supplements vitamin B12 side effects are nonexistent in healthy people. In
fact, doses as high as 1mg (1000 mcg) daily by mouth or 1 mg monthly by intramuscular (IM) injection have been used
to treat patients with pernicious anemia and not a single one of them ever complained of significant vitamin B12
side effects.
The reason behind the low level of toxicity or vitamin B12 side effect may have to do with the
fact that the body can only absorb small amounts of vitamin B12, even if taken in large doses. Because of this low
risk of vitamin B12 side effects, no tolerable upper intake level (UL) was set by the Food and Nutrition Board in
1998 when the RDA was revised.
As far as drug interactions are concerned, or vitamin B12 side effects when taken in conjunction
with other drugs, only a few number of drugs can affect the vitamin intake, but only as far as the rate of
absorption is concerned. One vitamin B12 side effect seems to be that when the vitamin is taken with proton pump
inhibitors, such as omeprazole and lasoprazole which are used for therapy of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and
gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), stomach acid secretion required for the release of vitamin B12 from food
decrease.
Another such drug that has vitamin B12 side effect is nitrous oxide. The drug is commonly used
anesthetic and it inhibits both vitamin B12 dependent enzymes. It can also produce many of the clinical features of
vitamin B12 deficiency, such as megaloblastic anemia or neuropathy. But other than that, there are no known vitamin
B12 side effects that are adverse enough to cause undue alarm.
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