Hey Austinite, I remember reading that you once had tons of fatigue.
Did you try D-Ribose? If you did how was it?
B vitamins for sure...what else?
Anyone else have something to add?
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Hey Austinite, I remember reading that you once had tons of fatigue.
Did you try D-Ribose? If you did how was it?
B vitamins for sure...what else?
Anyone else have something to add?
Would love to see some responses to this. I seem to get fatigued (tired) in the afternoon. But normally only at work when I am flying a desk all day. When i stay physically active no problem with fatigue?
Vitamin B12 helps me alot. My main issue was a considerable cortisol drop around 2 pm. Everyones levels drop around that time, but mine were too much. I'm taking prescription for it until I find the cause.
Recently found out that Chromium deficiency is incredibly common and is related to fatigue. I started Chromium mainly as a fat loss mineral (outlined here). I ran out of B12 mid-experiment and I actually felt fine, no major dip. I attribute that to Chromium.
Another forgotten mineral is copper. When your body utilizes Vitamin C and Zinc, this occurrence depletes your copper levels. Copper is another player here.
Methlycobalamin injections are the holy grail of B-12 and a great fatigue fighter. Used by the trained doc to fight CFS...Chronic fatigue syndrome cause by mononucliosis, fibromyalga, ect. the Methly ester prevents the b-12 from getting trapped in the liver where b-12 is stored then used when your body feels you need it. This is the mechanism for all forms of b-12 except the methly form. The methly makes the b-12 "first pass" meaning "passes" through the liver and all is bioavaliable. Many people think they taking enough or that they can even absorb B-12. Many cannot and injectable IM methly is the way to go. My 2 cents
What is the opinion on Sublingual methly?
your body also can store b12. it's worth consideration that perhaps you corrected your b12 deficiency, but when you stopped you had accrued enough reserves to "hold you over".
regardless, b12 is cheap and effective. some people can't absorb it so well. it would nice if you could find methyl form, but I've never seen it yet. doctors I've spoken to agree. not only that but the price of b12 seems to be going up because manufacturers stopped making it. it's a shame too because it actually contributes to health and not merely masking disease like so many other prescriptions.
Using MRM branded methyl B-12 2000 mcg sublingual lozenges daily, my blood levels went from 702 to 1169 on a range of 200-910 pg/mL. These can be found online all day for under $8 a bottle (60 lozenges).
I can't feel the difference with or without to tell you the truth. I assume only those who are deficient will notice the difference in which I just continue to take it for the health benefits.Quote:
Originally Posted by OdinsOtherSon
I feel nothing from b12...
unless you had a frank deficiency then I really doubt there is much to feel. but looking at the medical literature we know that there are risks to living with b12 levels under 600 long term. so it's not a bad "insurance policy" of sorts.
Not everyone "feels" something. But even then, it's certainly doing you good. The range is 200+ for B12, it's very easy to get in range. I'm not talking about being in range, not even remotely close. I'm talking maxing out your binding capacity year round, which is what I do. Either way, it's not for everyone.
Methyl is readily available, not sure why you can't find it.
Thanks guys for making this a good thread, I know it'll help some of us!
Dana & the Blue Muppet, now that's funny!
usvitamininjections.com and medicalsupplyliquidators.com carry them. Amps and vials.
Thanks Austinite!
Here's another that comes as a kit with some wipe pads and 25ga pins...wish they were 31s...guess I'll suggest that to them:
trimnutrition.com/methylcobalamin-1-000mcgl-kit-922.html
Talking all this methyl talk reminds me of the MTHFR Mutation.
That's right, a bunch of us here are probably Mutants......:wg:
mthfr.net/