Giving You Back YOUR Life

Start Early for best results - B12 in pregnancy

Is B12 safe?

Actually it's one of the safest of all the nutrients.  A European Commission study to identify the upper limit for vitamin supplements found an upper limit for every other Vitamin but declared that B12 is safe at any level.  It's safe in your diet, it's safe when taken as a supplement, and it's safe hen recorded in the blood.

Can you take B12 during pregnancy?

This is the important question.  As you kno, with most supplements, you need permission to take them during pregnancy or when nursing.  

By all means ask your doctor, midwife or health visitor, but the answer is YES.

B12 is vital for the healthy development of a baby, just as it was important to maintaining the hormone cycles and uterus repair that allowed you to get pregnant in the first place.  B12 is vital for development of the nervous tissue, which happens in the first trimester of pregnancy, and for the ongoing development of the baby throughout pregnancy.

It's also valuable for your own well-being as a mother.  The typical tendency of mammalian mothers is to give the baby what it needs at great cost to the mother, so if there isn't enough B12 to go around then the mother will typically suffer from a shortage (the baby may also suffer if there isn't enough for a rapidly growing baby).  People we've put on to B12 replacement therapy during pregnancy have reported less morning sickness, much less nausea, more energy, and no post-natal depression.  But before you get depressed that you didn't start earlier, it's never too late.

What can happen to a baby with a shortage of B12?

It's difficult to be sure what's due to B12 deficiency and what's due to something else, but babies from the same mother have been:

  • floppy baby syndrome without B12, next baby higher birthweight and attentive/ strong with B12
  • signs of autistic tendency (not looking at faces) without B12, although to be fair, supplementing the toddler with B12 often restores normal sociability
  • incomplete nervous system development manifesting in a variety fo different ways

Return to B12d Charity Support Group Blog

Julia found her eyesight going as her eyes refused to focus on the same things as each other. She's been for all sorts of tests and treatment, but now that she's on B12 replacement therapy she's starting to see an improvement.
The Scottish Parliament discusses Pernicious Anaemia and vitamin B12 deficiency on Wednesday 7 March 2012.
This video is over 1 hour long and represents real political change - we are at last on our way.
New documentary out from Elissa Leonard in North America, featuring Sally Pacholok and many other internationally renowned experts.
The definitive and original guide to B12 deficiency, Dr Chandy interviewed by Chris Jackson of UK BBC Inside Out Team broadcast 31 Oct 2008.
Dr Joseph Chandy explains symptoms and shows the restorative effect on one patient (other patients' families have asked that we edit out their stories unfortunately)
Susan gets very tired, which isn't much fun especially as she has so much to do. Here she tells her story.
The local MP (Grahame Morris MP for Easington - who was a BMS (BioMedical Scientist) in the labs at Sunderland Royal Infirmary) interviews people with B12 deficiency to hear their story (August 27 2010). Here Jane describes the symptoms, and how she can't wait for her next B12 injection (in fact, she knows that she needs injections every 2 weeks because she's keeping a diary of the symptoms). We're restricted how often the GP can give injections, which is why we want to raise awareness.
Frankie tells of how she suffered, the tests she had to endure until doctors worked out what was wrong, and what a difference it has made.
June describes her suffering when doctors didn't follow the standard protocol after any stomach or intestinal operation - to offer B12 replacement therapy
Donna, like so many women, wants to live a normal life. Vitamin B12 could give her that chance.
Dr Chandy was nominated for the North East Local Heroes award. The interviewer was at first surprised - people don't get awards for doing what they are paid to do - but she persisted.