Cure Depression With a Vitamin?
Cure Depression With a Vitamin? - Have you ever wondered if depression could be eased with an inexpensive over-the-counter supplement, no prescription required? Or how about extinguishing your chronic anxiety through more consumption of certain foods that contain natural stress-reducing ingredients? Read on, because I’ve got something for you that may be a pleasant shock!

Cure Depression With a Vitamin?
Have you ever wondered if depression could be eased with an inexpensive over-the-counter supplement, no prescription required? Or how about extinguishing your chronic anxiety through more consumption of certain foods that contain natural stress-reducing ingredients? Read on, because I’ve got something for you that may be a pleasant shock!
Vitamin B12 Deficiency Has Long Been Implicated in the Development of Depression.
It’s one of the basic building blocks of life. And it’s one of the all-star antidepressants. We all need vitamin B12 to make red blood cells and nerve cell membranes and to regulate the expression of our DNA and multiple other brain and body-based functions. It protects the brain and nervous system, regulates rest and mood cycles, and keeps the immune system functioning properly. A severe deficiency can lead not only to deep depression, paranoia and delusions, and memory loss, but also incontinence, the loss of taste and smell, and, eventually, physical brain shrinkage and dementia.She was treated with electroconvulsive therapy and antipsychotics to no avail. And then she was transferred to another hospital, where they happened to test her levels of vitamin B12. Guess what: That’s when they discovered she was a tad on the low side, and after receiving a vitamin B12 injection, she fully recovered. She was back to her old self quickly—her healthy self from 14 years previously—and needed no more treatment. While it may be one of the more extreme cases, it’s emblematic of how a simple but critical deficiency can be at the casual root of psychiatric manifestations and subsequent high-risk interventions.
Some two-fifths of the population are severely deficient in B12 for a variety of reasons, from poor diet and dysbiosis (a disrupted gut flora) to use of medications like acid-reflux (e.g., Prilosec and Nexium, what are referred to as “proton-pump inhibitors”) and diabetes drugs. Vegans and vegetarians may have to be extra cautious about becoming deficient because the richest source of vitamin B12 is found in animal products such as fish, poultry, meat, and eggs (hence the case of the lifelong vegetarian—it eventually caught up with her).
You must ask yourself: Is your depression being fueled by low B12? Could you cure your depression and get on with your life via a B12 supplement that costs as much as a ticket to a movie for a month's supply?
This is one of many ways in which depression (and fatigue, brain fog, etc.) presents an invitation to recalibrate, rebalance, and reexamine ways in which to better support our bodily organism.