Category: Vitamins

B2 (Riboflavin) And B3 (Niacin and Niacinamide)

B2 (Riboflavin) And B3 (Niacin and Niacinamide)

Vitamin B2, or riboflavin, is very much involved with your body’s energy processes, as well as many other processes. It is vital, for example, for healthy eyes, the production of antibodies, and proper tissue...

Combining vitamins with medication

Combining vitamins with medication

Some medications can deplete your body of specific vitamins and minerals. Similarly, some vitamins can increase or decrease your body’s absorption of some medications. The following list provides common examples of both possibilities. If...

The Alzheimer Epidemic

The Alzheimer Epidemic

Sadly, the incidence of this debilitating condition, where our loved ones slowly lose their memories and ability to cope with everyday life, is rising in the Western world. It has been calculated that by...

Proflavanol® C100

Proflavanol® C100

Grape-seed bioflavonoids and vitamin C work together to provide antioxidant activity over a longer period of time for better protective results than would be predicted from the sum of their individual effects. Proflavanol C100...

B-Complex or B Vitamins

B-Complex or B Vitamins

Thiamin, Riboflavin, Niacin, Pantothenic Acid, Biotin, Vitamin B6, Folate, Vitamin B12. B vitamins, also known as B-Complex, include eight water-soluble vitamins commonly found in foods. Thiamin Functions Thiamin, also known as vitamin B1, helps...

Vitamin C Function

Vitamin C Function

Vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid, is a water-soluble vitamin that has many important functions in the body: Vitamin C: • Helps produce collagen, a protein that holds bones and other tissues together...

Vitamin K Functions

Vitamin K Functions

Vitamin K is a fat-soluble vitamin needed by the liver to help it create several proteins required to help the blood clot. It also supports proteins involved in bone metabolism and cell growth. Several...

Vitamin D Functions

Vitamin D Functions

Vitamin D is a fat-soluble vitamin that helps control the level of calcium and phosphorus in the blood to help the body build and maintain strong bones and teeth. It also helps increase the...

Vitamin A Functions

Vitamin A Functions

Vitamin A is a fat-soluble vitamin that performs several key functions in the body: • Helps create and maintain healthy teeth, bones, and soft tissues in the body • Preserves your skin and mucous...

Functions of Vitamins

Functions of Vitamins

Your body needs small amount of vitamins to help it grow, develop, and function properly. Although vitamins are micronutrients and don’t provide calories or energy to the body the way the macronutrients (carbohydrates, fats,...

Folic Acid

Folic Acid

Folic acid is a B vitamin that is essential for helping your body make new cells. It is found in its natural form (called folate) in many foods, including leafy green vegetables, fruits, dried...

Vitamin C

Vitamin C

Vitamin C, which is also called ascorbic acid, is a vitamin that your body requires for good health. Your body uses it to form collagen in bones, cartilage, muscle, and blood vessels and to...

Vitamin C and Scurvy

Vitamin C and Scurvy

Scurvy, a fatal vitamin C deficiency that ravaged the British navy in the eighteenth century, caused extensive suffering and death for sailors at sea. But one valuable thing did come out of the epidemic:...

Vitamin B12

Vitamin B12

Vitamin B12 is a nutrient that your body requires for optimal health. It’s needed to make red blood cells, to help your nervous system work properly, and to synthesize DNA, which is the genetic...

Vitamin D Help on Disease Prevention

Vitamin D Help on Disease Prevention

Can vitamin D help with the symptoms of multiple sclerosis (MS)? Will vitamin D supplementation delay the progression of MS in someone who has MS? Patients with multiple sclerosis are often vitamin D deficient....

Vitamin D for Pregnancy and Newborns

Vitamin D for Pregnancy and Newborns

Consult Your Doctor BEFORE taking any recommended Vitamin D on your own. What are the recommendations for vitamin D during pregnancy? It is recommended that all pregnant women take the prenatal vitamins that contain...

What does vitamin D toxicity look like?

What does vitamin D toxicity look like?

Vitamin D toxicity is often difficult to diagnose. The diagnosis is made based on the blood biochemistries that include elevated blood calcium (usually above 10.4 milligrams per deciliter) along with a markedly elevated level...

Vitamin D How Much to Take and When

Vitamin D How Much to Take and When

The major issue with obtaining vitamin D from a pill is that you have to remember to take the pill. Nowadays, it’s easy to find supplements with 1,000 IU or even 2,000 IU per...

What is Vitamin D?

What is Vitamin D?

Naturally, we’re disposed to think about vitamin D as vitamin – a substance that we get from our diets, like vitamin C or niacin, and that participates in biological reactions to help the body...

Vitamin D – Dosage

Vitamin D – Dosage

How long does it take to increase 25-vitamin D levels after starting supplementation? Healthy adults taking 1,000 IU of vitamin D a day reach their peak blood level within five to six weeks. When...

Q&A Vitamin D

Q&A Vitamin D

What happens when you cook foods rich in Vitamin D, like wild salmon? Do you lose their potency? Vitamin D is relatively stable in foods. Storage, processing, and cooking have little effect on its...

Vitamin B12 Cyanocobalamin

Vitamin B12 Cyanocobalamin

Vitamin B12 is composed of several compounds that are given the generic name cobalamins because all of them contain cobalt. Vitamin B12 cannot be synthesized by plants and is found primarily in meat and...

Vitamin B9 Folic Acid (Folate)

Vitamin B9 Folic Acid (Folate)

The terms folate and folic acid are used interchangeably when referring to vitamin B9. Folic acid is the most stable of the two forms and is often found in supplements and fortified foods. Folate...

Vitamin B7 Biotin

Vitamin B7 Biotin

Biotin acts as a coenzyme that helps transport carbon dioxide between compounds. Biotin also plays a role in protein synthesis, the formation of long-chain fatty acids and the Krebs cycle, the basic biological process...

Vitamin B6 Pyridoxine

Vitamin B6 Pyridoxine

There are three forms of vitamin B6: pyridoxine, pyridoxal and pyridoxamine. All three are present in most body tissues, with the highest concentration being in the liver. Of the three, pyridoxine is the most...

Vitamin B2 Riboflavin and Vitamin B3 Niacin

Vitamin B2 Riboflavin and Vitamin B3 Niacin

Vitamin B2 – Riboflavin Riboflavin participates in the production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the body’s basic energy currency. The body uses ATP any time energy is needed – to move muscles, digest food, breathe,...

Vitamin B1 – Thiamine

Vitamin B1 – Thiamine

To better understand what thiamine does in the body, consider the word that describes thiamine deficiency: beriberi. This Sinhalese word means, “I can’t, I can’t”. And people suffering from beriberi can’t do a lot....