SUPPLEMENTS

Volleyball and Vitamin B12

Volleyball and Vitamin B12 || Vitamin B12 Injections || Vitamin B12 Shots
HEALING PROTOCOL:
HOW TO INJECT:
WHAT I EAT IN A DAY:

THE VITAMIN B12 INJECTIONS THAT CURED ME 100%:

*** The MOST POWERFUL Vitamin B12 liquid supplement that helped save my life:

*** The FIRST B12 SUPPLEMENT I took that stopped my decline and reversed my symptoms:

MY GOAL: to help every single person who comes across this channel recover 100% from their vitamin B12 deficiency (Pernicious Anemia).

For more details on how to HEAL:

My Vitamin B12 injection schedule:

*** Please share this video with every DOCTOR and NURSE that you know personally in order to raise awareness of Pernicious Anemia and Vitamin B12 deficiencies! ***

I did not have someone experienced with Pernicious Anemia and a vitamin B12 deficiency that I could lean on during my year and a half.

So I want to be that guy for YOU!

PLEASE reach out if you have any questions or comments about Pernicious Anemia or Vitamin B12 deficiencies.

You can always contact me at:

Volleyball and Vitamin B12

What a month of volleyball!
From winning a state championship in Texas for the biggest private school division, to playing backyard volleyball with the family, to playing beach volleyball in florida!

Can’t wait for more!

Thanks to vitamin B12 for giving me my life back!

What is vitamin B12 and what does it do?
Vitamin B12 is a nutrient that helps keep the body’s nerve and blood cells healthy and helps make DNA, the genetic material in all cells. Vitamin B12 also helps prevent a type of anemia called megaloblastic anemia that makes people tired and weak.

Two steps are required for the body to absorb vitamin B12 from food. First, hydrochloric acid in the stomach separates vitamin B12 from the protein to which vitamin B12 is attached in food. After this, vitamin B12 combines with a protein made by the stomach called intrinsic factor and is absorbed by the body. Some people have pernicious anemia, a condition in which they cannot make intrinsic factor. As a result, they have trouble absorbing vitamin B12 from all foods and dietary supplements.

Am I getting enough vitamin B12?
Most people in the United States get enough vitamin B12 from the foods they eat. But some people have trouble absorbing vitamin B12 from food. As a result, vitamin B12 deficiency affects between 1.5% and 15% of the public. Your doctor can test your vitamin B12 level to see if you have a deficiency.

Certain groups may not get enough vitamin B12 or have trouble absorbing it:

Many older adults, who do not have enough hydrochloric acid in their stomach to absorb the vitamin B12 naturally present in food. People over 50 should get most of their vitamin B12 from fortified foods or dietary supplements because, in most cases, their bodies can absorb vitamin B12 from these sources.
People with pernicious anemia whose bodies do not make the intrinsic factor needed to absorb vitamin B12. Doctors usually treat pernicious anemia with vitamin B12 shots, although very high oral doses of vitamin B12 might also be effective.
People who have had gastrointestinal surgery, such as weight loss surgery, or who have digestive disorders, such as celiac disease or Crohn’s disease. These conditions can decrease the amount of vitamin B12 that the body can absorb.
Some people who eat little or no animal foods such as vegetarians and vegans. Only animal foods have vitamin B12 naturally. When pregnant women and women who breastfeed their babies are strict vegetarians or vegans, their babies might also not get enough vitamin B12.

What happens if I don’t get enough vitamin B12?
Vitamin B12 deficiency causes tiredness, weakness, constipation, loss of appetite, weight loss, and megaloblastic anemia. Nerve problems, such as numbness and tingling in the hands and feet, can also occur. Other symptoms of vitamin B12 deficiency include problems with balance, depression, confusion, dementia, poor memory, and soreness of the mouth or tongue. Vitamin B12 deficiency can damage the nervous system even in people who don’t have anemia, so it is important to treat a deficiency as soon as possible.

In infants, signs of a vitamin B12 deficiency include failure to thrive, problems with movement, delays in reaching the typical developmental milestones, and megaloblastic anemia.

Large amounts of folic acid can hide a vitamin B12 deficiency by correcting megaloblastic anemia, a hallmark of vitamin B12 deficiency. But folic acid does not correct the progressive damage to the nervous system that vitamin B12 deficiency also causes. For this reason, healthy adults should not get more than 1,000 mcg of folic acid a day.