Updated
Updated · Moneycontrol · Jun 27
Cornell Study Says Vitamin B12 Powers Red Blood Cells, Nerves and DNA in Tiny Daily Doses
Updated
Updated · Moneycontrol · Jun 27

Cornell Study Says Vitamin B12 Powers Red Blood Cells, Nerves and DNA in Tiny Daily Doses

2 articles · Updated · Moneycontrol · Jun 27

Summary

  • Cornell researchers said vitamin B12 is essential for healthy red blood cells, nerve protection and DNA production, underscoring how a nutrient needed only in millionths of a gram can have outsized health effects.
  • Common deficiency signs include persistent fatigue, weakness, shortness of breath, tingling, poor balance, memory lapses and brain fog, symptoms that often build gradually and are mistaken for normal ageing.
  • Older adults, vegans, vegetarians and people with impaired absorption face higher risk; long-term use of some diabetes or acid-reflux medicines can also reduce B12 uptake.
  • Early lab and animal studies suggest low B12 may also impair mitochondria and energy production before anaemia appears, though researchers said more human evidence is still needed.
  • Doctors advise confirming deficiency with a blood test, noting supplements or injections are proven to help people with genuine low B12, not those whose levels are already normal.

Insights

Vitamin B12: How do you avoid deficiency without risking the dangers of too much?
Your B12 level is 'normal,' but is it high enough to protect your brain?