Spirulina is not considered to be a reliable source of Vitamin B12. Spirulina supplements contain predominantly pseudovitamin B12, which is biologically inactive in humans.The American Dietetic Association and Dietitians of Canada in their position paper on vegetarian diets state that spirulina cannot be counted on as a reliable source of active vitamin B12.The medical literature similarly advises that spirulina is unsuitable as a source of B12
Can anyone let me know if they have taken this? I want some but I heard alot about diseases and illnesses from algaeand it is worrying me cos I don't wana make myself sick !!
I am curious about what is his blood type? Is he Type O or A or B? I ask because I subscribe somewhat to Dr. Peter D'Adamo's blood typology research, and the work of others.
B12 is impossible to find in plant foods. Only B12 analogues are in plant foods, including all the edible algae. Blue green algae from Klamath lake is amazing stuff regardless!
@SecretsOfLongevity Hi Zack, I have some spirulina powder from N** in front of me, and it says it has 5mcg of B12 per serving (7g), so what's the deal, do they add B12 to the mix?
@pcu0000 It's a B12 analogue that some plants (specifically a lot of marine algae and seaweeds) contain. The molecules are nearly identical but the analogues have no track record for raising B12 levels in the blood. Dr. Cousens has studied this at the Tree of Life centre and has said there are no algae that raise B12 levels.
Spirulina is not considered to be a reliable source of Vitamin B12. Spirulina supplements contain predominantly pseudovitamin B12, which is biologically inactive in humans.The American Dietetic Association and Dietitians of Canada in their position paper on vegetarian diets state that spirulina cannot be counted on as a reliable source of active vitamin B12.The medical literature similarly advises that spirulina is unsuitable as a source of B12
gregnotes 1 month ago
might be a dumb question but does blue green algae contain chlorella ?
ian2sexy 1 month ago
Can anyone let me know if they have taken this? I want some but I heard alot about diseases and illnesses from algaeand it is worrying me cos I don't wana make myself sick !!
bluffr22 2 months ago
You should add some pixie dust to that to really step it up a notch. Meteorite, crystal? lol
SergioHdz12 2 months ago
that guy should meet up with Dan The Man or Dave the raw food trucker
hammerpower100 4 months ago
What's the music played?
eiouwa1 4 months ago
can i use quarts instead
MsYaHomie 6 months ago
Comment removed
cosmicseeds 7 months ago
Thats How I drink My green juice.
zbiiigs 8 months ago
I am curious about what is his blood type? Is he Type O or A or B? I ask because I subscribe somewhat to Dr. Peter D'Adamo's blood typology research, and the work of others.
ckpeltomaa 8 months ago
can i make this water with e3 live algae flakes aswell?
mOOds999 9 months ago
Where do you get those glass bottles? It's hard to find glass jars with plastic lids.
fortitude1981 10 months ago
wHAT IS THIS GUY DOCTOR in ?
clickswitchh 10 months ago
@clickswitchh Chiropractic.
shanatp 7 months ago
I cannot find this on your web page, when will this be available?
MrTonybusby 10 months ago
B12 is impossible to find in plant foods. Only B12 analogues are in plant foods, including all the edible algae. Blue green algae from Klamath lake is amazing stuff regardless!
SecretsOfLongevity 10 months ago
@SecretsOfLongevity Hi Zack, I have some spirulina powder from N** in front of me, and it says it has 5mcg of B12 per serving (7g), so what's the deal, do they add B12 to the mix?
pcu0000 10 months ago
@pcu0000 It's a B12 analogue that some plants (specifically a lot of marine algae and seaweeds) contain. The molecules are nearly identical but the analogues have no track record for raising B12 levels in the blood. Dr. Cousens has studied this at the Tree of Life centre and has said there are no algae that raise B12 levels.
SecretsOfLongevity 10 months ago