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    <title>Horse Pre Race : RSS Product Feed :: B12 Injection 1000 (100 mL)</title>
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      <title>B12 Injection 1000 (100 mL)</title>
      <link>http://www.horseprerace.com/b12-injection-1000-100-ml-p-51.html</link>
      <comments>http://www.horseprerace.com/index.php?main_page=product_reviews&amp;products_id=51</comments>
      <description><![CDATA[ <a href="http://www.horseprerace.com/b12-injection-1000-100-ml-p-51.html"><img src="http://www.horseprerace.com/bmz_cache/1/1189bf33e8bdd8dad7b236c8bcb12615.image.100x80.gif" alt="B12 Injection 1000 (100 mL)" title=" B12 Injection 1000 (100 mL) " width="100" height="80" style="float: left; margin: 0px 8px 8px 0px;" style="position:relative" onmouseover="showtrail('bmz_cache/1/1f5605fa377001b92a07a6b715889fd0.image.300x250.jpg','B12 Injection 1000 (100 mL)',100,80,300,250,this,0,0,100,80);" onmouseout="hidetrail();"  /></a><p><font size="3"> Vitamin B12 injections are an effective and tested cure for horses, dogs, 
  greyhounds, alpacas, & camels suffering from a deficiency of the vitamin. 
 </font></p>
<p> <font size="3"><b>COMPOSITION </b><br />
  B12 1000mg/ml </font></p>
<p><font size="3"><b>Actions </b><br />
  Horses, dogs, greyhounds, alpacas, & camels suffering from pernicious anemia are treated with a regular dosage 
  of vitamin B12 injections. This is due to the fact that they are unable to absorb 
  sufficient vitamin B12 from their dietary food sources and therefore require 
  intramuscular injections to aid absorption. Nowadays, there are substitutes 
  in the form of oral supplementation; however physicians generally resort to 
  this classical treatment.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">Research findings show ample evidence to reveal that cobalamin injections of 
  1-2 mg per day can quickly correct deficiencies. It is not apparent whether 
  smaller amounts, such as the 25 mcg or so found in multivitamins, are sufficient 
  to cure deficiencies. Such a claim is substantiated by the fact that although 
  oral supplementation with vitamin B12 is safe, efficient and inexpensive and 
  most multi-vitamin pills contain 100-200 microgram of the cyanocobalamin form 
  of B12, many multivitamins cannot be chewed, which is important for its absorption.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">The body's ability to absorb vitamin B12 is reduced with increasing age. Older 
  people are often detected to have a more potent vitamin B12 deficiency, even 
  in cases where they do not suffer from pernicious anaemia. Moreover, an intake 
  of vitamin B12 from food sources decreases markedly with an increase in age, 
  probably because of a lack of stomach acid. The conventional way of fixing a 
  vitamin B12 deficiency has been through intramuscular injections. Experiments 
  also reveal that vitamin B12 intramuscular injections are useful healers of 
  neurological disorders such as progressive memory loss and lethargy.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">To maintain vitamin B12 status, the alternatives to high oral doses of cobalamin 
  (500-1000 micrograms daily) are routine intramuscular injections at a dosage 
  of 1 mg per month. This also helps to lower homocysteine levels in the blood, 
  thereby reducing the probability of heart diseases and strokes.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">The utility of vitamin B12 is not restricted to curing deficiencies. Injections 
  can also serve therapeutic purposes. A vitamin B12 injection acts as a stimulant 
  for energizing the body, through cobalamin, which transmits its “anti-stress” 
  elements to the human body. For example a recommended effective cure for chronic 
  fatigue syndrome (CFS) is 6-70mg dose of vitamin B12 intramuscular injection 
  per week for 3 weeks.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">Vitamin B 12 provides detailed information on Vitamin B 12, Vitamin B 12 Creams, 
  Vitamin B 12 Deficiency, Vitamin B 12 Injections and more. Vitamin B 12 is affiliated 
  with Topical Vitamin C.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">Vitamin B12 is a water soluble vitamin with a key role in the normal functioning 
  of the brain and nervous system, and for the formation of blood. It is one of 
  the eight B vitamins. It is normally involved in the metabolism of every cell 
  of the body, especially affecting DNA synthesis and regulation, but also fatty 
  acid synthesis and energy production.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">Vitamin B12 is the name for a class of chemically-related compounds, all of 
  which have vitamin activity. It is structurally the most complicated vitamin. 
  Biosynthesis of the basic structure of the vitamin can only be accomplished 
  by bacteria, but conversion between different forms of the vitamin can be accomplished 
  in the human body. A common synthetic form of the vitamin, cyanocobalamin, does 
  not occur in nature, but is used in many pharmaceuticals, supplements and as 
  food additive, due to its stability and lower cost. In the body it is converted 
  to the physiological forms, methylcobalamin and adenosylcobalamin, leaving behind 
  the cyanide, albeit in minimal concentration. More recently, hydroxocobalamin, 
  methylcobalamin and, adenosylcobalamin can also be found in more expensive pharmacological 
  products and food supplements. The utility of these is presently debated.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">Historically, vitamin B12 was discovered from its relationship to the disease 
  pernicious anemia, which is an autoimmune disease that destroys parietal cells 
  in the stomach that secrete intrinsic factor. Intrinsic factor is crucial for 
  the normal absorption of B12, therefore, a lack of intrinsic factor, as seen 
  in pernicious anemia, causes a vitamin B12 deficiency. Many other subtler kinds 
  of vitamin B12 deficiency, and their biochemical effects, have since been elucidated.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">The name vitamin B12, known as vitamin B12 (commonly B12 or B12 for short) 
  generally refers to all forms of the vitamin. Some medical practitioners have 
  suggested that its use be split into two different categories, however.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">In a broad sense B12 refers to a group of cobalt-containing vitamer compounds 
  known as cobalamins: these include cyanocobalamin (an artifact formed as a result 
  of the use of cyanide in the purification procedures), hydroxocobalamin (another 
  medicinal form), and finally, the two naturally occurring cofactor forms of 
  B12: 5-deoxyadenosylcobalamin (adenosylcobalamin—AdoB12), the cofactor 
  of Methylmalonyl Coenzyme A mutase (MUT), and methylcobalamin (MeB12), the cofactor 
  of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate-homocysteine methyltransferase (MTR). <br />
  The term B12 may be properly used to refer to cyanocobalamin, the principal 
  B12 form used for foods and in nutritional supplements. This ordinarily creates 
  no problem, except perhaps in rare cases of eye nerve damage, where the body 
  is only marginally able to use this form due to high cyanide levels in the blood 
  due to cigarette smoking, and thus requires cessation of smoking, or else B12 
  given in another form, for the optic symptoms to abate.[1] However, tobacco 
  amblyopia is a rare enough condition that debate continues about whether or 
  not it represents a peculiar B12 deficiency which is resistant to treatment 
  with cyanocobalamin. <br />
  Finally, so-called Pseudo-B12 refers to B12-like substances which are found 
  in certain organisms, including Spirulina (a cyanobacterium) and some algae. 
  These substances are active in tests of B12 activity by highly sensitive antibody-binding 
  serum assay tests, which measure levels of B12 and B12-like compounds in blood. 
  However, these substances do not have B12 biological activity for humans, a 
  fact which may pose a danger to vegans and others on limited diets who do not 
  ingest B12 producing bacteria, but who nevertheless may show normal "B12" 
  levels in the standard immunoassay which has become the normal medical method 
  for testing for B12 deficiency.[2]</font></p>
<p><font size="3">Vitamin B12 is a collection of cobalt and corrin ring molecules which are defined 
  by their particular vitamin function in the body. All of the substrate cobalt-corrin 
  molecules from which B12 is made must be synthesized by bacteria. However, after 
  this synthesis is complete, the body has a limited power to convert any form 
  of B12 to another, by means of enzymatically removing certain prosthetic chemical 
  groups from the cobalt atom.</font></p>
<p><font size="3">Cyanocobalamin is one such compound that is a vitamin in this B complex, because 
  it can be metabolized in the body to an active co-enzyme form. However, the 
  cyanocobalamin form of B12 does not occur in nature normally, but is a byproduct 
  of the fact that other forms of B12 are avid binders of cyanide (-CN) which 
  they pick up in the process of activated charcoal purification of the vitamin 
  after it is made by bacteria in the commercial process. Since the cyanocobalamin 
  form of B12 is deeply red colored, easy to crystallize, and is not sensitive 
  to air-oxidation, it is typically used as a form of B12 for food additives and 
  in many common multivitamins. However, this form is not perfectly synonymous 
  with B12, inasmuch as a number of substances (vitamers) have B12 vitamin activity 
  and can properly be labeled vitamin B12, and cyanocobalamin is but one of them. 
  (Thus, all cyanocobalamin is vitamin B12, but not all vitamin B12 is cyanocobalamin).[3]</font></p>
<p><font size="3">B12 is the most chemically complex of all the vitamins. The structure of B12 
  is based on a corrin ring, which is similar to the porphyrin ring found in heme, 
  chlorophyll, and cytochrome. The central metal ion is cobalt. Four of the six 
  coordination sites are provided by the corrin ring, and a fifth by a dimethylbenzimidazole 
  group. The sixth coordination site, the center of reactivity, is variable, being 
  a cyano group (-CN), a hydroxyl group (-OH), a methyl group (-CH3) or a 5'-deoxyadenosyl 
  group (here the C5' atom of the deoxyribose forms the covalent bond with Co), 
  respectively, to yield the four B12 forms mentioned above. Historically, the 
  covalent C-Co bond is one of first examples of carbon-metal bonds to be discovered 
  in biology. The hydrogenases and, by necessity, enzymes associated with cobalt 
  utilization, involve metal-carbon bonds.
</font></p>
<p> <font size="3"><b>Indications</b><br />
  VITAMIN B12-1000 INJECTION is used as an aid in the treatment of anemia in horses 
  where a deficiency of vitamin B12 is a contributing factor<br /><br /><b>Form </b> Injectable / Injections
</font> 
  
  </p>
<p> <font size="3"><b>Category - </b>Injectable Vitamins, Blood Builders</font></p>
<p><font size="3"><b>For: </b>Horses, Dogs, Greyhounds, Alpacas, & Camels <br /></font></p><p><font size="3"><b>Dosage and Administration </b><br />
  Administer 2 µg per kg of body weight, intramuscularly or intravenously. Repeat 
  as indicated. 
</font>
  </p>
<p> <font size="3"><b>Presentation - </b>Size: 30mL sterile multi-dose glass vial.
</font></p>
<p><font size="3"><b>Storage - </b>Store below 25 C (Air Conditioning)
  
</font></p>
<p><font size="3"><b>Notes - </b>This product can be used with any other vitamin or supplement from HorsePreRace<br /><b><br />
  Also see - </b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.horseprerace.com/newcells-injectable-canadian-blood-builder-100-ml-p-45.html">NEWCELLS</a>, 
  HIPPIRON, B COMPLEX, </font>
  
  </p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Aug 2010 23:32:20 -0500</pubDate>
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