Patients are frequently asked to explain why they take high fat- or water-soluble vitamin doses. They are have often been scared by their well meaning healthcare providers that their higher levels of vitamin supplements will end up with vitamin toxicity.
Let’s clarify one point: there is such a thing as too much vitamin.
However, the point that is often overlooked, throughout teaching within professional schools (medical, nursing, pharmacy, etc.) and drug manufacturers, is recommendations are based on “how much to take” and not how much is needed to keep a patient’s blood level in the normal range.
This table highlights how toxicity is described and what requirements are recommended. Vitamin toxicity is seen rarely in post-weight loss surgical patients who take them proactively in as many doses as needed to get their blood levels in the normal range. I see more patients in the office who suffer from low vitamin levels, such as vitamin D and A levels (duodenal switch and sleeve), than any patient with high or toxic levels of any vitamins.
Here is an example of critical vitamin A deficiency and night blindness and how, with aggressive large-dose supplementation, her condition was corrected.
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