Tips For You
- Avoid eating a restricted or limited diet since B vitamins are found in a variety of foods. Lentils, peas, eggs, brown rice, spinach, Brazil nuts and pecans are rich B-1 sources. Consume mushrooms, oysters, low-fat yogurt, broccoli, Brussels sprouts and almonds to get enough B-2 in your diet. Incorporate fish, salmon, tuna, low-fat dairy, sunflower seeds and peanuts so that you can get an adequate amount of B-3.
- Talk to your physician about taking B vitamin supplements to increase your levels if you currently have a deficiency, or if you are prescribed certain medication. Contraceptives, statins, anti-anxiety drugs and acid reflux medication are just a few pharmaceutical drugs that can cause or worsen B-vitamin deficiency. When supplementing B vitamins it's best to take a complex that includes all eight. The other five B vitamins are pantothenic acid, pyridoxine, biotin, folate and cobalamin.
- Limit your alcohol intake, because excess consumption decreases levels of all B vitamins. Alcohol raises your urinary output, which increases excretion of B vitamins since they are water-soluble. Alcohol consumed in excess damages villi -- small finger-like structures in your intestines, which are necessary for nutrient absorption. When your villi become damaged, your body becomes less able to absorb enough vitamins, including vitamins B-1, B-2, and B-3, from the food you eat.
- Work with your physician to determine whether you have an underlying condition that is reducing your B vitamin levels. Diagnosing and treating underlying conditions can improve your B vitamin levels. Inflammatory bowel diseases such as Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and irritable bowel syndrome can decrease the levels of nutrients that your body absorbs. An intolerance to gluten -- a protein found in wheat, rye and barley -- can damage your intestines and lower your B vitamin levels.
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