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Medications and Nutrients: 3 Drugs That Could Deplete Key Nutrients

Jenn Fernandez

Written by Jenn Fernandez, Senior Director of Marketing, Kaneka Nutrients

Updated on August 4, 2016

The Internet is filled with articles about drugs that deplete important nutrients. This information is often presented as if the conclusions were firmly established when, in fact, sometimes there’s not enough data to back up such statements.

Future studies may provide stronger support for nutrients depletion claims. In the meantime, there is published evidence that three drugs classes, while helpful in many ways, can also deplete your body of nutrients.

Antibiotics Can Deplete Vitamin B12 and Vitamin K

Antibiotics are meant to kill bacteria that are making you sick but, in the process, these drugs also wind up killing good bacteria that live inside your intestines.

Some of those good bacteria (such as Lactobacillus reuteri, Bacillus spp. and Escherichia coli) make vitamins our bodies need – in particular, Vitamin B12 and Vitamin K 1,2.

Our bodies use these bacterial by-products, along with the food we eat, to provide such vitamins. When the good bacteria are destroyed, our bodies can become nutritionally deficient.

Doctors prescribe antibiotics when they believe the drug’s benefits outweigh any risks or side effects. Taking a probiotic supplement (sold in most vitamin stores) during and in the weeks after a course of antibiotics can help restore the good bacteria your body actually needs.

Cholesterol-Lowering Statins Can Deplete Ubiquinol CoQ10

Millions of Americans take a type of prescription drug called a statin, to manage their cholesterol. These drugs are good at lowering the type of cholesterol doctors consider bad for heart health.

Unfortunately, this type of medicine can also reduce the amount of Ubiquinol CoQ10 we make naturally 3-6. This is because the biological action that helps produce cholesterol also helps make the CoQ10 we need.

Small, prolonged decreases in Ubiquinol CoQ10 can disrupt the body’s ability to produce cellular energy and cause other issues such as muscle cramps.

People who take a statin can address this nutritional deficit by taking a daily dietary supplement that contains the Ubiquinol form of CoQ10. You can find Ubiquinol in most vitamin stores.

Acid Blockers Can Affect Calcium and Zinc Absorption

Each year, more than half of all Americans experience discomfort from acid reflux. For many of these people, acid blockers such as proton pump inhibitors (Prevacid, Nexium, Prilosec) and H2-inhibitors (Zantac, Pepcid, Tagamet) provide much needed relief.

These medicines work by stopping the release of acid in the stomach; however, reducing the amount of stomach acid can interfere with the way our bodies absorb nutrients including calcium and zinc. Researchers aren’t certain exactly how this happens.

People taking a proton pump inhibitor long term seem to be at increased risk of bone fractures, but the mechanism linking those acid blocking drugs to such fractures is unclear. 7 Gastric acid secretion has also been found to affect zinc absorption. 8 More studies are needed before scientists can determine the cause for these relationships.

If you take an acid blocker on a regular basis, you should ask your doctor what s/he thinks about you taking a zinc or calcium supplement. (It’s good to check with your doctor before supplementing your diet with any vitamin or nutrient.)

*Information on this site is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice. Always consult your doctor or licensed healthcare provider with any questions about your health and before starting a new exercise program. Never delay contacting your doctor or disregard medical advice because of something you have read on this website or the internet.

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Information on this site is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice. Always consult your doctor or licensed healthcare provider with any questions about your health and before starting a new exercise program. Never delay contacting your doctor or disregard medical advice because of something you have read on this website or the internet.

* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.

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