Vitamin B12 is a water-soluble vitamin meaning it cannot be stored by the body because it is eliminated in urine (which is the nice scientific way of saying you get rid of it when you wee!).
We need a continuous daily supply of vitamin B12 in our diet. The recommended daily allowance of vitamin B12 is 1mcg and the recommended upper limit is 1000mcg. Deficiency is rare, but as vitamin B12 can only be obtained from animal sources (meat or dairy), vegans may be lacking in this particular vitamin.
Water-soluble vitamins like vitamin B12 are easily destroyed by the preparation and cooking of food. The best way to minimise this is to refrigerate fresh meat, and keep dairy products and grains away from strong direct light.
| Food | Serving size | Cals | Amount | GDA (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eggs | 47g | 69 | 0.6 mcg | 60 % |
| Semi-skimmed milk | 250ml | 115 | 0.9 mcg | 115 % |
| Chicken Liver | 100g | 190 | 1.1 mcg | 2000 % |
| Turkey | 90g | 138 | 0.36 mcg | 36 % |
| Cod | 120g | 115 | 1.2 mcg | 120 % |
| Pork | 120g | 221 | 0.84 mcg | 80 % |
Dr Ian Campbell
A leading UK weight loss expert & Nutracheck's
medical advisor
Angela Dowden
Nutrition advisor & regular expert press columnist
Vicky Hall
is our consultant nutritionist
Kelly Marshall
Nutracheck's
fitness expert &
consultant to World
Class Hockey