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Hypertension, Reversible

Grade_1_hypertension[1]What Is Reversible Hypertension?

[dropcap]R[/dropcap]eversible hypertension is a pressure disorder of arteries associated with increased systemic (body wide) blood vessel resistance to blood flow due to endothelial (cell) dysfunction of arterial blood vessels that can improve with nutritional treatment.

Hypertension itself is defined as a systolic blood pressure (SBP) of 140 mm Hg (mercury) or greater and/or diastolic blood pressure (DBP) of 90 mm Hg or greater.

Q: What is blood vessel (vascular) resistance to blood flow?

A: Vascular resistance to blood flow means the arteries carrying blood away from the heart cannot relax or dilate when needed to lower blood pressure but stay constricted, which in turn, keeps the pressure high.

Here’s an analogy: if you replace your garden hose having a one inch inside diameter with one that has a smaller half inch diameter and open the water valve as usual, the result would be water shooting out with more force.

What Is Reversible Hypertension In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Vitamin B12 Deficiency

Clams Are Chock Full of Vitamin B12.
Lovely Clams For Vitamin B12.

What Is Vitamin B12?

[dropcap]V[/dropcap]itamin B12, also called cobalamin, is a highly complex vitamin that functions in two coenzyme forms: adenosylcobalamin and methylcobalamin.

These forms of the vitamin play important roles in the physical and chemical processes by which amino acids become proprionate, proprionate that becomes acetate,  and single carbons.

Q: Why are these steps important?

A: These steps are essential for normal function in the workings of all cells, especially for those of the digestive tract, bone marrow and nervous tissue.

Vitamin B12 is mainly excreted through bile into the duodenum (first part of the small intestine) for excretion in stool.1 However, if vitamin B12 is needed, it is reabsorbed in the ileum (end of the small intestine) while excess is excreted in stool and very little in urine.2

The blood level of vitamin B12 in healthy people ranges between 140 and 750 pg/ml.

What Is Vitamin B12 Deficiency In Celiac Disease and/or Gluten Sensitivity?

Sources:
  1. Shibata K, Hirose J, Fukuwatari T. Relationship Between Urinary Concentrations of Nine Water-soluble Vitamins and their Vitamin Intakes in Japanese Adult Males. Nutr Metab Insights. 2014 Aug 5;7:61-75. doi: 10.4137/NMI.S17245. []
  2. Shinton N K. Vitamin B 12 and folate metabolism. Br Med J. Feb 26, 1972; 1(5799): 556–559. []

Hypertension, Reversible: definition

Sustained elevated arterial blood pressure resulting from impaired absorption of essential co-factors for normal homocysteine metabolism (folate, vitamin B12, or vitamin B6)  that resolves with normalization of homocysteine levels.