Hey guys, why do you not measure serum carnitine levels? They are well measurable, the tests are accessible in any Western country having proper medicine, and not expensive (There are rare exceptions when the measurements are not valid: in exceptional cases, muscle or neuronal carnitine can be low without serum carnitine being low.) Here where I live, any family doctor can order a carnitine test in any lab that can freeze. They send it to a specialty lab and I get the result in 1 week. All paid by health insurance. Just make sure you have a phlebotomist that can immediately centrifuge + freeze. And one has to find an openminded doctor because they are not trained on carnitine in spite of quite some people having issues.
Why take the test?
1) because supplementation increases the amount you pee out and so you can get a deficiency in the end of the day if you supplement on the morning (so usually 2x per day is recommended)
2) Supplementation results in haphazard levels of carnitine. Details:
for oral supplements your find any numbers for absorption you want, but usually absorption is badly low (15-18%, but you find numbers from 10% to well above, depending on x y z ... circumstances)
You may want to avoid oral supplementation altogether because it worsens gut dysbiosis (in mice as fast as 2 weeks, in me just alike ... somaybe I am a lab mouse .. or what
). It increases just the prevotella Dr Meirleir eradicates to cure CFS (successfully in a few people, not successfully in others.) Then your alternative is: eating meat high in carnitine (kangaroo
)
together with animal fat (which desinfects the gut, I have research on that if you are interested). Or use curcumin to increase OCTN2 expression, which increases kidney retention of carnitine (ask me for research, I have that somewhere and I like people who like research
). BUT, bigggg but, these measures are haphazard in that they are underresearched and nobody knows how much the effect is unless you measure. And whatever you do, it is haphazard anywise bc carnitine needs differ among people like hell depending on fat intake, organic acidurias, sports done or not done, and whatnot. (I do have research for all things I state in all this post, except for this one: I wish to see a good table of "this type of guy needs this many carnitine". Have you ever seen any research / experiences on this?))
3) Recovery times take months in various diseases (it helps somewhat with CFS, fibro, macular degeneration, and many many more, I collected all the studies and will post a summary one day if I have the time). But imagine that you supplement, accept some damage to your gut microbiota and do not reach good levels for recovery because you pee it out or it does poorly absorb , or or or... wouldn't that be a waste of your months of life? As an example, in neuropathy, the maximum achievable recovery can be up to 24 months. Wanna wait in vain bc you didn't measure and absorbed little?
I do not earn money from your testing, and I do not hold shares in any specialty lab... I wish I would
... I just wrote the above in the hope it helps you. Here is my
new thread for those who do have carnitine levels tested so we can share experiences and discuss recoveries related to our levels of deficiencies, symptoms, etc:
https://forums.phoenixrising.me/thr...-from-a-diagnosed-carnitine-deficiency.79915/
@Richard7 I too found l-carnitine was useful if I ate too much meat or any protein for that matter. In my case it turns out that l-carntine helps to flush out the toxins from excess propionic acid. Propionic acid along with methylmalonic acid is formed when one of the two pathways which depends on B12 is blocked by deficiency.
Propionic acid gives me a lot of brain fog and makes me feel generally very unwell especially an hour after eating protein
precious lines!
@Emootje