The Optimal Vitamin B12 Dosage for Adults

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Why the current Recommended Daily Allowance for vitamin B12 may be insufficient.

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Below is an approximation of this video’s audio content. To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video.

Compared to non-vegetarians, those removing meat from their diets tend to have healthier body weights, cholesterol, blood sugars, and blood pressures, with a lower mortality rate due to ischemic heart disease, the #1 killer of men and women. However, underestimating the importance of correct supplementation of vitamin B12 can nullify these benefits. Currently, the official position of associations and governmental agencies is categorical and unequivocal: in the case of a vegetarian diet, even if you eat eggs and dairy—and, in fact, I would extend that to flexitarians eating a few servings of meat a week—supplementation of vitamin B12 is required.

Now, it’s not just those eating plant-based that should be concerned about getting enough B12. About one in three nonvegetarians aren’t getting enough for optimal health, and that may exceed half in women, especially when they’re pregnant. But this number could run as high as nearly 9 out of 10 among those eating strictly plant-based, and 10 out of 10 doing it long-term.

There are three groups of people who should ensure they have a regular, reliable source of vitamin B12 by supplementing their diet with vitamin B12-fortified foods or B12 supplements: those who’ve had bariatric surgery (which can sometimes impair absorption), those eating plant-based diets, and the more than a hundred million Americans older than age 50.

Why can’t you get regularly tested for signs of functional B12 deficiency, like getting your homocysteine or methylmalonic acid (MMA) level tested? Though those are nearly always elevated in cases of B12 deficiency, there are rare cases of severe B12 deficiency manifesting with normal B12 levels in the blood, normal MMA levels, and normal homocysteine. How do we know it was B12 deficiency? Because within months of B12 treatment, they made a remarkable recovery. So, best to just take it and not wait for symptoms to arise. The question is: how much, and how often?

Some recommend a single dose of 50 to 100 micrograms a day or a thousand micrograms twice a week. Others suggest 50 to 150 micrograms a day. Some even recommend 500 micrograms a day. It all depends on the target levels you want in your body. For those with normal absorption capacity, meaning being under age 50 with an intact gastrointestinal system and without diseases like pernicious anemia, we normally lose about one microgram of vitamin B12 a day; so, that’s how much we have to replace, on average, every day. So, why is the Recommended Daily Allowance 2.4 micrograms a day? Well, we only absorb about half of the tiny doses of the B12 we get in our diet; so, by eating 2.4, we can make sure we absorb the one microgram into our body to replace the one microgram we’re losing every day.

Taking larger doses, like in supplement form, an even smaller fraction is absorbed. So, it might take a single oral dose of 10 micrograms to get that one microgram absorption. But just 10 a day failed to sufficiently lower homocysteine levels to under 10 even after a year; so, maybe we need to absorb more than that 1.6 micrograms every day for optimal health. The current RDA is primarily based on a 1958 study that just looked at a small number of patients, and only measured their blood counts. Absorbing one microgram a day may be enough to maintain blood cell production, but may not be sufficient for all the other things that vitamin B12 does.

“Based on the data of several vitamin B12 status biomarkers studies,” maybe the recommended intake for most adults should be raised to more like four, which is what you see for example in Europe, suggesting they want people to absorb at least two into their body every day. In that case you’d need to take more than 50 a day. And, now we have data suggesting getting seven a day may be even better. So, if you wanted to absorb 3.5 micrograms, half of the intake that may optimize functional B12 status, how much would you need to take in a single daily dose? This chart isn’t granular enough, but there’s a formula you can use to calculate it. U stands for uptake––absorption into your body––and D is your single daily dose. To absorb 3.5, you’d theoretically need to take a single daily dose of about 225, which I round in my recommendations to 250 a day.

Now, that’s just one of three methods you can use. A simpler and cheaper way is to take a single dose a week. If you want 3.5 in you a day, then you’d want to get at least 24.5 in you in a week. To get that in a single dose you’d have to theoretically take about 2,600, which I round in my recommendations to 2,500. Okay, but that’s theoretical. Maybe you need even more? On the contrary, a new study showed you can get away with even less. Just 50 a day (not 250, or 2,000 once a week, not 2,500) reliably bought blood levels up, and more importantly, normalized methylmalonic acid and homocysteine levels within a matter of months. So, based on this new study, I dropped my supplement recommendations down to that 50 a day or 2000 a week.

Please consider volunteering to help out on the site.

Video production by Glass Entertainment

Motion graphics by Avocado Video

Below is an approximation of this video’s audio content. To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video.

Compared to non-vegetarians, those removing meat from their diets tend to have healthier body weights, cholesterol, blood sugars, and blood pressures, with a lower mortality rate due to ischemic heart disease, the #1 killer of men and women. However, underestimating the importance of correct supplementation of vitamin B12 can nullify these benefits. Currently, the official position of associations and governmental agencies is categorical and unequivocal: in the case of a vegetarian diet, even if you eat eggs and dairy—and, in fact, I would extend that to flexitarians eating a few servings of meat a week—supplementation of vitamin B12 is required.

Now, it’s not just those eating plant-based that should be concerned about getting enough B12. About one in three nonvegetarians aren’t getting enough for optimal health, and that may exceed half in women, especially when they’re pregnant. But this number could run as high as nearly 9 out of 10 among those eating strictly plant-based, and 10 out of 10 doing it long-term.

There are three groups of people who should ensure they have a regular, reliable source of vitamin B12 by supplementing their diet with vitamin B12-fortified foods or B12 supplements: those who’ve had bariatric surgery (which can sometimes impair absorption), those eating plant-based diets, and the more than a hundred million Americans older than age 50.

Why can’t you get regularly tested for signs of functional B12 deficiency, like getting your homocysteine or methylmalonic acid (MMA) level tested? Though those are nearly always elevated in cases of B12 deficiency, there are rare cases of severe B12 deficiency manifesting with normal B12 levels in the blood, normal MMA levels, and normal homocysteine. How do we know it was B12 deficiency? Because within months of B12 treatment, they made a remarkable recovery. So, best to just take it and not wait for symptoms to arise. The question is: how much, and how often?

Some recommend a single dose of 50 to 100 micrograms a day or a thousand micrograms twice a week. Others suggest 50 to 150 micrograms a day. Some even recommend 500 micrograms a day. It all depends on the target levels you want in your body. For those with normal absorption capacity, meaning being under age 50 with an intact gastrointestinal system and without diseases like pernicious anemia, we normally lose about one microgram of vitamin B12 a day; so, that’s how much we have to replace, on average, every day. So, why is the Recommended Daily Allowance 2.4 micrograms a day? Well, we only absorb about half of the tiny doses of the B12 we get in our diet; so, by eating 2.4, we can make sure we absorb the one microgram into our body to replace the one microgram we’re losing every day.

Taking larger doses, like in supplement form, an even smaller fraction is absorbed. So, it might take a single oral dose of 10 micrograms to get that one microgram absorption. But just 10 a day failed to sufficiently lower homocysteine levels to under 10 even after a year; so, maybe we need to absorb more than that 1.6 micrograms every day for optimal health. The current RDA is primarily based on a 1958 study that just looked at a small number of patients, and only measured their blood counts. Absorbing one microgram a day may be enough to maintain blood cell production, but may not be sufficient for all the other things that vitamin B12 does.

“Based on the data of several vitamin B12 status biomarkers studies,” maybe the recommended intake for most adults should be raised to more like four, which is what you see for example in Europe, suggesting they want people to absorb at least two into their body every day. In that case you’d need to take more than 50 a day. And, now we have data suggesting getting seven a day may be even better. So, if you wanted to absorb 3.5 micrograms, half of the intake that may optimize functional B12 status, how much would you need to take in a single daily dose? This chart isn’t granular enough, but there’s a formula you can use to calculate it. U stands for uptake––absorption into your body––and D is your single daily dose. To absorb 3.5, you’d theoretically need to take a single daily dose of about 225, which I round in my recommendations to 250 a day.

Now, that’s just one of three methods you can use. A simpler and cheaper way is to take a single dose a week. If you want 3.5 in you a day, then you’d want to get at least 24.5 in you in a week. To get that in a single dose you’d have to theoretically take about 2,600, which I round in my recommendations to 2,500. Okay, but that’s theoretical. Maybe you need even more? On the contrary, a new study showed you can get away with even less. Just 50 a day (not 250, or 2,000 once a week, not 2,500) reliably bought blood levels up, and more importantly, normalized methylmalonic acid and homocysteine levels within a matter of months. So, based on this new study, I dropped my supplement recommendations down to that 50 a day or 2000 a week.

Please consider volunteering to help out on the site.

Video production by Glass Entertainment

Motion graphics by Avocado Video

Doctor's Note

This is the second in a five-part video series on B12. Stay tuned for:

If you missed the first video, check out The Symptoms of Vitamin B12 Deficiency.

You can find all of these videos in a digital download here, along with two additional videos that will be coming out in a few months.

My new recommendations are updated on my Optimum Nutrition Recommendations page.

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