RLR
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Hello Nurse Jo,
I would be more concerned to know your serum calcidiol versus serum calcitriol than I would anything to do with D2 and D3 independently since these forms are related to source rather than function. If your calcidiol is low, then while sufficient intake would lead the inquiry, I would ultimately want to know whether a problem at the liver is preventing sufficient conversion of D2 & D3 into calcidiol and if calcitriol is low, then I'd be looking at the kidneys to determine whether sufficient conversion is taking place such that is can finally be used by the body in this form.
Inadequate intake is far more practical to treat than assessing what is happening to the D2 and D3 that is taken in. In other words, I'd first want to increase D2 and D3 to within normal range and then test conversion at both the liver stage and kidney stage by examining levels of calcidiol and subsequently calcitriol. If those levels are within normal range, then you're merely dealing with intake of the vitamin.
B12 malabsorption appears to remain a mystery in your case and again, I wonder about intrinsic factor levels, whether there may be a possibility of a gene mutation of cubilin on chromasome 10 that might be a familial cause for the disorder. Although this is extremely unlikely, it should still be considered unless a more salient reason can be determined. It also reminds me that you had made previous discussion of IBS or some type of inflammatory bowel disease, which could certainly result in malabsorption to some extent, far less chance in the instance of garden variety IBS.
Regardless, nothing of supplementation in either instance places you at increased risk of any type.
Best regards,
Rutheford Rane, MD (ret.)
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