The reason I was wondering this was because of Natasha St. whatever her name is. She said in her videos that she had been taking B12 oral supplements for years and tested dangerously low afterwards.
Knowing that Durianrider is a big proponent of the shots and other people cite studies saying that sublinguals are just as effective, I'm wondering if anyone in our community has experienced taking b12 pills yet later testing too low.
This is a good question, isn't it? thanks guys!
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Permalink Reply by Dovima on May 23, 2012 at 12:28am thank you for the advice. It's not an issue though. I'm honestly trying to learn the answer to the question I posed, if some people have diligently taken sublinguals and not absorbed B12 like what Natasha claimed.
Permalink Reply by Diospyros on May 23, 2012 at 12:07am Somewhat of a poor question because there was somebody here who said they did, but turns out they used them only rarely. If you're trying to cure a deficiency, you probably should use them every day. That study mentioned that even WITHOUT intrinsic factor, 1% of b12 is still absorbed orally (closer to 100% sublingually of course). People just don't take enough, simple as that.
Permalink Reply by Dovima on May 23, 2012 at 12:11am thank you for the judgement on the question itself- very helpful!
Permalink Reply by Dovima on May 23, 2012 at 12:20am The question specifically is asking for feedback from community members. I'm trying to figure out if what Natasha said was truthful. I don't think she'd lie but there could have been some complications like she simply wasn't taking enough.
Permalink Reply by Sweetfruitlover on May 23, 2012 at 3:35am I tested low two summers ago. I got six shots at first, and then I switched to sublinguals. Last summer I tested at the top of the normal range, so I'm sure they're working for me. I'll check again this summer and post if not, but I'm confident that I'm fine. I have another friend (he's a member here and might weigh in and I know him in real life too) who also tested low and only did the sublinguals and then tested fine, so they worked for him too.
Permalink Reply by Richie Fruitbat on May 23, 2012 at 4:19am I'd love an answer on this topic as currently sublinguals are my only option. The only way I could get shots would be if someone in another country bought them and mailed them to me!
Permalink Reply by Michaelvl on May 23, 2012 at 7:02am I recon that if sublingual's where effective Dr's and hospital's would be offering them as an alternative to injections, seen that most "patients" would jump on the option to take a grape flavored vitamin pill over a "painful" injection, fact is they don't. I recon because it is questionable if sublingual's are actually effective.
Also the reason why B12 deficiency is very common under meat eaters, is because they lack the ability to absorb B12 through their digestive track. B12 deficiency is defiantly not a Vegan only problem.
Sublingual's are only going to work for you if you don't have B12 digestive/absorption issues. B12 shots defiantly work period because they don't pass you digestive track and go directly through your muscle to your blood.
I recently switched from taking B12 sublingual's to giving myself shot's and I can defiantly feel the difference in my running and fitness.
Permalink Reply by L on May 23, 2012 at 11:16am B12 sublinguals work for me, at least the brand I buy works! I think the brand you buy is very important. I have tried so many brands across the years and the brand I use is the one that started working for me!
Also, doctors love giving shots of anything, especially if it is preventative, like "vaccines." To "treat," they love handing out pills and liquids.
Sublinguals are starting to become a subject of conversation, as I learned in my clinical nutrition course this past semester.
Permalink Reply by Dovima on May 24, 2012 at 3:37pm
Permalink Reply by Sweetfruitlover on May 25, 2012 at 7:08am Yes they do. That's why you keep them under your tongue to absorb right into the bloodstream. And the reason hospitals don't offer them is probably because they're not an immediate fix like a shot is, and they're not prescription drugs. They work just fine - there are many studies documenting this, not just anecdotal evidence.
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