Same for me :thumbdown:or any of those anti inflammatory type supplements like pine bark extract or grape seed extract. They are hypoglycemia in a bottle for me.
That's new information to me!Vitamin B1 plays a role in the production of thyroxin, as does phenylalanine and tyrosine (the latter is the immediate forerunner of thyroxin).
I must emend my OP here:The supplement folic acid is a synthetic, inactive form that requires more methyl donors to be activated than food folate.
My personal experience with B6:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3779535/
Insulin resistance and dysregulation of tryptophan-kynurenine and kynurenine-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide metabolic pathways
http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/mic/vitamins/vitamin-B6
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Hemoglobin synthesis
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The RDA
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Mine was 7.2 umol/L [0-15]. That was July 2014, the only time I've had it tested. It was "plasma", though. Would it make a difference to test serum?@picante I have always found serum homocisteine the best inflammation marker which tells you what you need to change in your diet/supplementation.
Nope, it's the same thing. Next look at lymphocyte count (available from a regular RBC/WBC count).Mine was 7.2 umol/L [0-15]. That was July 2014, the only time I've had it tested. It was "plasma", though. Would it make a difference to test serum?
@Gondwanaland Where did you read that fat is a methyl donor?fat (methyl donors)
I am sorry for being inespecific, you are right, it is the high choline content in fat that makes it a good methyl donor.@Gondwanaland Where did you read that fat is a methyl donor?
Choline (which isn't the same thing as fat) is in some foods that happen to be high in fat...but fat alone being a methyl donor?
In 2014 (August):Next look at lymphocyte count (available from a regular RBC/WBC count).
My lab range for lymphocytes is 1000 - 4500 uL and in my experience when they are below 25% (~1,100uL) I may be in trouble. DH's are at 40,4 % 2280/uL!Does that tell us anything?
Here is the link for choline in some kinds of fat. You will notice that the foods highest in choline (eggs and meats) are high in fat.@Gondwanaland Sorry to keep harping at this, but it isn't correct that fat is high in choline, it is only certain kinds of foods that are high in choline, and the fat content doesn't correlate. For example, canola oil, and many plant oils and animal source oils, have almost no choline. Yet eggs have a lot of choline.
http://nutritiondata.self.com/foods-004144000000000000000-w.html?maxCount=6
Foods highest in Choline
(based on levels per 100-gram serving)
in Fats and Oils
1 Vegetable oil, soybean lecithin
Choline: 350mg
2 Fat, chicken
Choline: 122mg
3 Fat, duck
Choline: 122mg
4 Fat, turkey
Choline: 122mg
5 Fat, beef tallow
Choline: 80mg
6 Fat, mutton tallow
Choline: 80mg
Read More http://nutritiondata.self.com/foods-004144000000000000000-w.html?maxCount=6#ixzz47eQmg6iP
I'll wait and see what the current lab results are.My lab range for lymphocytes is 1000 - 4500 uL and in my experience when they are below 25% (~1,100uL) I may be in trouble. DH's are at 40,4 % 2280/uL!
So I think they are kind of lowish at 27% considering all the vitamins you take...
Hypoglycemia can be caused by ATP-sensitive potassium channel (K+ATP) dysfunction so would taking potassium tablets be similar to potassium channel opening that occurs with nitrate drugs (and dietary nitrates)?Very interesting reading, thanks for the link.
I have low blood pressure, not high. And chronic hypoglycemia. I often have to eat in the middle of the night. I also have polyuria, so I don't think I'm retaining salt (which I consume in quantity, to try and keep water in my body).Hypoglycemia is a stress symptom. This causes potassium to be excreted in the urine and salt to be retained, contributing to hypertension.
I have low blood pressure too along with chronic GI dysfunction but I'm not hypoglycemic. I was looking for a reason to explain why vasodilator nitrate meds increased my blood pressure. Opening of the K+ATP channel was one reason I could find that might explain the rise in b.p.I have low blood pressure, not high. And chronic hypoglycemia. I often have to eat in the middle of the night. I also have polyuria, so I don't think I'm retaining salt (which I consume in quantity, to try and keep water in my body).