Guest guest Posted February 10, 2009 Report Share Posted February 10, 2009 Thank you for the information. It is very helpful! Michelle Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 10, 2009 Report Share Posted February 10, 2009 mdlvseattle vitamin B deficency > Hello, I think I remember reading some posts over the last few years regarding vegan diet and > Vitamin B deficiency. I've been a raw vegan for about 3 years and think I may be becoming > deficient (recently had a blood test that indicated elevated homocysteine levels). Hi Michelle, I have a nutrition background, have been vegan for 7 years, and at one point had a B12 deficiency, so I have some thoughts on this. :-) If you would like to email me directly, feel free: manager Doh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2009 Report Share Posted February 19, 2009 Hi all, Well, I quickly received 6 off-list requests for my b12 thoughts, so I will share them on the list. Sorry it's taken me a week to make time for this post - hopefully no one went anemic waiting for me. :-D Please know that I respect other people's opinions and experiences around b12. I have been known to disagree with vegans and raw foodists on this but my goal is to spread what I believe to be grounded nutrition information so that we can all live healthy lives without animal cruelty. There is a lot of dangerous misinformation about B12. B12 is a coenzyme (which means that enzymes need b12 to do their jobs). And b12 is needed for EVERY function of the body, so a b12 deficiency can show up in many different ways, and/or along a spectrum of severity. The deficiency symptoms we usually think of - neurologic or anemia - are only advanced cases. So a spectrum of neurologic sypmtoms might begin with a slight tremble, or an occasional tingling sensation, long before it advances to the symptoms we think of. And there may be symptoms that are not obviously b12 related, but because the enzymes are lacking their friendly cohort, they may actually be caused by a lack of b12. Furthermore, some diseases caused by B12 deficiency (pregnancy complications, heart disease) won't show up at all until advanced stages have set in. B12 is bacterial " waste " product, not made by plants. Nutritional yeast, for example, is a strain of yeast grown specifically because it takes up the B12 of its growing medium, not because the yeast itself makes it. Fermented foods create b12. [Nutritional yeast is not a raw food, but is very commonly used in vegan recipes, so whether or not you eat it will impact your ability to get b12 from your diet.] A common misconception (that I, unfortunately, spread for years) is that we can - or some say, used to - get it from microorganisms in the dirt, with our soil-grown food as the vehicle, and that modern agriculture has robbed us of a reliable source of bacteria. The truth is that even unwashed plants grown organically do not contain significant amounts of B12. Some plants can take up B12 via their roots, but only if b12 is *added to the soil.* Another area of misunderstanding is that our intestinal flora make b12. There are 400+ strains of bacteria in our colon and we do not know which of them produce b12 and we do not know which individuals have which strains. In addition to not knowing if our personal bacteria makes much b12, we *do* know that absorption of b12 can only happen " upstream " (small intestine) of where the b12 is produced (large intestine, or colon). In other words, we are physically incapable of absorbing the b12 that we're making. When we eat B12 (whether from vitamins or fortified foods, or from fermented foods) it is delivered from the stomach to the small intestine by Intrinsic Factor. I thought I knew enough about nutrition to be safe from deficiency, but y'know the saying, " a little knowledge can be dangerous " ? There is really no way to tell from how you feel today, or even in 10 years, if you're deficient, or when your pre-vegan stores of b12 will run out. There are many factors that are individual and impossible to know: ~ the quantity Intrinsic Factor and enzymes your body makes (IF decreases as we age, too); ~ symptoms can be mild, or seemingly unrelated, or look like something else; ~ each individual's ability to absorb b12 from your bile ( " enterohepatic circulation " ); ~ there may be no symptoms until a serious health problem arises, such as heart disease or pregnancy complications. Specific to raw food diets: http://www.veganhealth.org/b12/raw So, that's my B12 knowledge in a nutshell. I accidentally deleted the first post and so I may not have answered the specific question, but the upshot of it is that most people who study this topic in depth do not believe you can get enough b12 in your diet to be at optimum health, even if you feel fine and have felt fine for years. Feel free to contact me off list if I've missed some of your questions. Doh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 19, 2009 Report Share Posted February 19, 2009 If fermented foods produce B12, then can't raw vegans simply eat lots of things like raw sauerkraut? Judy Pokras vegwriter http://Green-Advertising.blogspot.com Specializing in promoting raw vegan and other green businesses. Editor/founder/publisher Raw Foods News Magazine www.rawfoodsnewsmagazine.com An online magazine celebrating raw vegan cuisine since March 2001, and featuring authoritative info, breaking news, and fun interactive features on the raw vegan lifestyle. Have you signed up for our free e-newsletter? STOP GLOBAL WARMING GO VEGAN bumper sticker: http://www.cafepress.com/rawfoods.86920766 On Thu, Feb 19, 2009 at 6:10 PM, Sidecar Manager < manager wrote: > Hi all, > > Well, I quickly received 6 off-list requests for my b12 thoughts, so I > will share them on the list. Sorry it's taken me a week to make time > for this post - hopefully no one went anemic waiting for me. :-D > > Please know that I respect other people's opinions and experiences > around b12. I have been known to disagree with vegans and raw foodists > on this but my goal is to spread what I believe to be grounded nutrition > information so that we can all live healthy lives without animal > cruelty. There is a lot of dangerous misinformation about B12. > > B12 is a coenzyme (which means that enzymes need b12 to do their jobs). > And b12 is needed for EVERY function of the body, so a b12 deficiency > can show up in many different ways, and/or along a spectrum of severity. > The deficiency symptoms we usually think of - neurologic or anemia - are > only advanced cases. So a spectrum of neurologic sypmtoms might begin > with a slight tremble, or an occasional tingling sensation, long before > it advances to the symptoms we think of. And there may be symptoms that > are not obviously b12 related, but because the enzymes are lacking their > friendly cohort, they may actually be caused by a lack of b12. > Furthermore, some diseases caused by B12 deficiency (pregnancy > complications, heart disease) won't show up at all until advanced stages > have set in. > > B12 is bacterial " waste " product, not made by plants. Nutritional > yeast, for example, is a strain of yeast grown specifically because it > takes up the B12 of its growing medium, not because the yeast itself > makes it. Fermented foods create b12. [Nutritional yeast is not a raw > food, but is very commonly used in vegan recipes, so whether or not you > eat it will impact your ability to get b12 from your diet.] > > A common misconception (that I, unfortunately, spread for years) is that > we can - or some say, used to - get it from microorganisms in the dirt, > with our soil-grown food as the vehicle, and that modern agriculture has > robbed us of a reliable source of bacteria. > > The truth is that even unwashed plants grown organically do not contain > significant amounts of B12. Some plants can take up B12 via their > roots, but only if b12 is *added to the soil.* > > Another area of misunderstanding is that our intestinal flora make b12. > There are 400+ strains of bacteria in our colon and we do not know which > of them produce b12 and we do not know which individuals have which > strains. In addition to not knowing if our personal bacteria makes much > b12, we *do* know that absorption of b12 can only happen " upstream " > (small intestine) of where the b12 is produced (large intestine, or > colon). In other words, we are physically incapable of absorbing the > b12 that we're making. > When we eat B12 (whether from vitamins or fortified foods, or from > fermented foods) it is delivered from the stomach to the small intestine > by Intrinsic Factor. > > I thought I knew enough about nutrition to be safe from deficiency, but > y'know the saying, " a little knowledge can be dangerous " ? There is > really no way to tell from how you feel today, or even in 10 years, if > you're deficient, or when your pre-vegan stores of b12 will run out. > There are many factors that are individual and impossible to know: > ~ the quantity Intrinsic Factor and enzymes your body makes (IF > decreases as we age, too); > ~ symptoms can be mild, or seemingly unrelated, or look like something > else; > ~ each individual's ability to absorb b12 from your bile ( " enterohepatic > circulation " ); > ~ there may be no symptoms until a serious health problem arises, such > as heart disease or pregnancy complications. > > Specific to raw food diets: > http://www.veganhealth.org/b12/raw > > So, that's my B12 knowledge in a nutshell. I accidentally deleted the > first post and so I may not have answered the specific question, but the > upshot of it is that most people who study this topic in depth do not > believe you can get enough b12 in your diet to be at optimum health, > even if you feel fine and have felt fine for years. > > Feel free to contact me off list if I've missed some of your questions. > Doh > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2009 Report Share Posted February 20, 2009 > Judy Pokras > If fermented foods produce B12, then can't raw vegans simply eat lots of things like raw sauerkraut? In *theory* it might be possible. In real life, the study that was done on raw vegans who consumed a " large intake of bacterially fermented foods " show that, in practice, one cannot eat enough to prevent deficiency of B12. The link I gave yesterday includes this section: ------ Living Food Eaters in Finland Rauma et al.2 (1995, Finland) examined the B12 status in long-term adherents of a strict, uncooked (raw) vegan diet called the " living food diet. " They assumed their large intake of bacterially fermented foods (about 2 kg/day in this study) would provide plenty of B12 as well as modify their intestinal bacteria to provide more B12. In Part 1 of the study, food consumption data were collected and blood samples were taken from 9 vegan " living food eaters " (LFE) (1 male, 8 females), 2 years apart. Six of the 9 vegans showed slow, consistent deterioration of B12 status over this period, indicating that the supply of B12 from the " living food diet " was inadequate to maintain the sB12. ------- Doh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2009 Report Share Posted February 20, 2009 This is an interesting topic for me. What about herbivores? Apes? Do they need B12 and if so, where do they get it? Humorous aside: hmm... dirt, right? And that's the ultimate answer to why children eat dirt--they're trying to get there B12 On Fri, Feb 20, 2009 at 10:59 AM, Sidecar Manager <manager wrote: >> If fermented foods produce B12, then can't raw vegans simply eat lots > of things like raw sauerkraut? > > In *theory* it might be possible. In real life, the study that was done > on raw vegans who consumed a " large intake of bacterially fermented > foods " show that, in practice, one cannot eat enough to prevent > deficiency of B12. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 20, 2009 Report Share Posted February 20, 2009 > joel > This is an interesting topic for me. What about herbivores? Apes? Do they need B12 and if so, where do they get it? Re: apes, from http://www.vegsource.com/articles/walsh_byrnes_b12_print.htm " Most large wild primates consume minimal amounts of meat (insufficient to provide a human with B12) yet have blood B12 levels similar to non-vegetarian humans. Some primates eat faeces, some deliberately eat insects and all consume remnants of insects incidentally with the fruits, leaves and shoots which form the bulk of the diet of our great ape relatives. All get their B12 from bacteria. " And from: http://www.veganhealth.org/b12/animal " Ruminants Cows are ruminants (as are bison, buffalo, goats, antelopes, sheep, deer, and giraffes).1 Ruminants have a four-chambered stomach and a rich supply of bacteria in their rumen (the first chamber that their food enters).1 Some of these bacteria produce B12 in amounts normally sufficient to meet their needs.2 Primates Non-human primates typically eat small amounts of eggs, insects, and small vertebrates and/or soil.3,4 Gorillas, possibly the closest to vegan of all the species closely related to humans, eat insects,3,4 and sometimes feces.5 Other Herbivores Horses, elephants, zebras, rabbits, hares, and many rodents have large cecums in their digestive tracts, located between the small and large intestine,1 where bacterial fermentation takes place. Some sources say that all non-ruminant herbivores require some B12 fortification of their feeds,2 but at least one source says that bacteria in a horse's digestive tract are able to produce enough B12 to prevent a dietary need.6 Many wild herbivores, such as elephants,7 inadvertently ingest soil on a regular basis. Hares, rabbits, and some rodents eat their fecal pellets, which provide an opportunity to obtain vitamins produced by bacteria in their digestive tracts.1 " > Humorous aside: hmm... dirt, right? And that's the ultimate answer to why children eat dirt--they're trying to get there B12 Hah! I remember my little sister convincing my little brother to eat a spoonful of dirt... My son eating dirt from the houseplants... Doh Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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