Vitamin B6
Vitamin B6: What is it?
What foods provide vitamin B6?
What is the Recommended Dietary
Allowance for vitamin B6 for adults?
When can a vitamin B6
deficiency occur?
Who may need extra vitamin B6 to
prevent a deficiency?
What are some current issues
and controversies about vitamin B6?
Vitamin
B6
and the nervous system
Vitamin B6 and
carpal tunnel syndrome
Vitamin
B6 and premenstrual syndrome
Vitamin B6 and
interaction with medications
What is the relationship between
vitamin B6, homocysteine, and heart disease?
What is the health risk of too
much vitamin B6?
Selected food sources of
vitamin B6
Table of selected food sources
of vitamin B6
References
Printable
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Vitamin
B6: What is it ?
Vitamin B6 is a
water-soluble vitamin that exists in three major chemical forms: pyridoxine,
pyridoxal, and pyridoxamine (1, 2). It performs a wide variety of functions in
your body and is essential for your good health. For example, vitamin B6 is
needed for more than 100 enzymes involved in protein metabolism. It is also
essential for red blood cell metabolism. The nervous and immune systems need
vitamin B6 to function efficiently, (3-6) and it is also needed for the
conversion of tryptophan (an amino acid) to niacin (a vitamin) (1, 7).
Hemoglobin within red
blood cells carries oxygen to tissues. Your body needs vitamin B6 to make
hemoglobin. Vitamin B6 also helps increase the amount of oxygen carried by
hemoglobin. A vitamin B6 deficiency can result in a form of anemia (1) that is
similar to iron deficiency anemia.
An immune response is a
broad term that describes a variety of biochemical changes that occur in an
effort to fight off infections. Calories, protein, vitamins, and minerals are
important to your immune defenses because they promote the growth of white blood
cells that directly fight infections. Vitamin B6, through its involvement in
protein metabolism and cellular growth, is important to the immune system. It
helps maintain the health of lymphoid organs (thymus, spleen, and lymph nodes)
that make your white blood cells. Animal studies show that a vitamin B6
deficiency can decrease your antibody production and suppress your immune
response (1, 5).
Vitamin B6 also helps
maintain your blood glucose (sugar) within a normal range. When caloric intake
is low your body needs vitamin B6 to help convert stored carbohydrate or other
nutrients to glucose to maintain normal blood sugar levels. While a shortage of
vitamin B6 will limit these functions, supplements of this vitamin do not
enhance them in well-nourished individuals (1, 8-10).
What
foods provide vitamin B6
?
Vitamin B6 is found in a wide
variety of foods including fortified cereals, beans, meat, poultry, fish, and
some fruits and vegetables (1, 11). The table of selected food sources of
vitamin B6 suggests many dietary sources of B6.
What
is the Recommended Dietary Allowance for vitamin B6
for adults?
The Recommended Dietary
Allowance (RDA) is the average daily dietary intake level that is sufficient to
meet the nutrient requirements of nearly all (97 to 98 percent) healthy
individuals in each life-stage and gender group (12).
The 1998 RDAs for vitamin
B6 (12) for adults, in milligrams, are:
| Life-Stage |
Men |
Women |
Pregnancy |
Lactation |
| Ages
19-50 |
1.3
mg |
1.3
mg |
|
|
| Ages
51+ |
1.7
mg |
1.5
mg |
|
|
| All
ages |
|
|
1.9 mg |
2.0 mg |
| Results
of two national surveys, the National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES III1988-94) (12, 13) and the Continuing Survey of Food
Intakes by Individuals (1994-96 CSFII) (12), indicated that diets of
most Americans meet current intake recommendations for vitamin B6. (12). |
When
can a vitamin B6
deficiency occur?
Clinical signs of vitamin B6 deficiency are rarely seen in the United
States. Many older Americans, however, have low blood levels of vitamin B6,
which may suggest a marginal or sub-optimal vitamin B6 nutritional status.
Vitamin B6 deficiency can occur in individuals with poor quality diets that are
deficient in many nutrients. Symptoms occur during later stages of deficiency,
when intake has been very low for an extended time. Signs of vitamin B6
deficiency include dermatitis (skin inflammation), glossitis (a sore tongue),
depression, confusion, and convulsions (1, 12). Vitamin B6 deficiency also can
cause anemia (1, 12, 14). Some of these symptoms can also result from a variety
of medical conditions other than vitamin B6 deficiency. It is important to have
a physician evaluate these symptoms so that appropriate medical care can be
given.
Who
may need extra vitamin B6 to prevent a deficiency?
Individuals with a poor quality diet or an inadequate B6 intake for an
extended period may benefit from taking a vitamin B6 supplement if they are
unable to increase their dietary intake of vitamin B6 (1, 15). Alcoholics and
older adults are more likely to have inadequate vitamin B6 intakes than other
segments of the population because they may have limited variety in their diet.
Alcohol also promotes the destruction and loss of vitamin B6 from the body.
Asthmatic children treated
with the medicine theophylline may need to take a vitamin B6 supplement (16).
Theophylline decreases body stores of vitamin B6 (17), and theophylline-induced
seizures have been linked to low body stores of the vitamin. A physician should
be consulted about the need for a vitamin B6 supplement when theophylline is
prescribed.
What
are some current issues and controversies about vitamin B6?
Vitamin
B6 and the nervous system
Vitamin B6 is needed for the synthesis of neurotransmitters such as serotonin
and dopamine (1). These neurotransmitters are required for normal nerve cell
communication. Researchers have been investigating the relationship between
vitamin B6 status and a wide variety of neurologic conditions such as seizures,
chronic pain, depression, headache, and Parkinson's disease (18).
Lower levels of serotonin
have been found in individuals suffering from depression and migraine headaches.
So far, however, vitamin B6 supplements have not proved effective for relieving
these symptoms. One study found that a sugar pill was just as likely as vitamin
B6 to relieve headaches and depression associated with low dose oral
contraceptives (19).
Alcohol abuse can result
in neuropathy, abnormal nerve sensations in the arms and legs (20). A poor
dietary intake contributes to this neuropathy and dietary supplements that
include vitamin B6 may prevent or decrease its incidence (18).
Vitamin
B6 and carpal tunnel syndrome
Vitamin B6 was first recommended for carpal tunnel
syndrome almost 30 years ago (21). Several popular books still recommend taking
100 to 200 milligrams (mg) of vitamin B6 daily to treat carpal tunnel syndrome,
even though scientific studies do not indicate it is effective. Anyone taking
large doses of vitamin B6 supplements for carpal tunnel syndrome needs to be
aware that the Institute of Medicine recently established an upper tolerable
limit of 100 mg per day for adults (12). There are documented cases in the
literature of neuropathy caused by excessive vitamin B6 taken for treatment of
carpal tunnel syndrome (22).
Vitamin
B6 and premenstrual syndrome
Vitamin B6 has become a popular remedy for treating the discomforts
associated with premenstrual syndrome (PMS). Unfortunately, clinical trials have
failed to support any significant benefit (23). One recent study indicated that
a sugar pill was as likely to relieve symptoms of PMS as vitamin B6 (24). In
addition, vitamin B6 toxicity has been seen in increasing numbers of women
taking vitamin B6 supplements for PMS. One review indicated that neuropathy was
present in 23 of 58 women taking daily vitamin B6 supplements for PMS whose
blood levels of B6 were above normal (25). There is no convincing scientific
evidence to support recommending vitamin B6 supplements for PMS.
Vitamin
B6 and interactions with medications
There are many drugs that interfere with the metabolism of vitamin B6.
Isoniazid, which is used to treat tuberculosis, and L-DOPA, which is used to
treat a variety of neurologic problems such as Parkinson's disease, alter the
activity of vitamin B6. There is disagreement about the need for routine vitamin
B6 supplementation when taking isoniazid (26, 27). Acute isoniazid toxicity can
result in coma and seizures that are reversed by vitamin B6, but in a group of
children receiving isoniazid, no cases of neurological or neuropsychiatric
problems were observed regardless of whether or not they took a vitamin B6
supplement. Some doctors recommend taking a supplement that provides 100% of the
RDA for B6 when isoniazid is prescribed, which is usually enough to prevent
symptoms of vitamin B6 deficiency. It is important to consult with a physician
about the need for a vitamin B6 supplement when taking isoniazid.
What
is the relationship between vitamin B6,
homocysteine, and heart disease?
A deficiency of vitamin B6, folic acid, or vitamin B12 may increase your
level of homocysteine, an amino acid normally found in your blood (28). There is
evidence that an elevated homocysteine level is an independent risk factor for
heart disease and stroke (29-37). The evidence suggests that high levels of
homocysteine may damage coronary arteries or make it easier for blood clotting
cells called platelets to clump together and form a clot. However, there is
currently no evidence available to suggest that lowering homocysteine level with
vitamins will reduce your risk of heart disease. Clinical intervention trials
are needed to determine whether supplementation with vitamin B6, folic acid, or
vitamin B12 can help protect you against developing coronary heart disease.
What
is the health risk of too much vitamin B6
?
Too much vitamin B6 can result in nerve damage to the arms and legs. This
neuropathy is usually related to high intake of vitamin B6 from supplements,
(28) and is reversible when supplementation is stopped. According to the
Institute of Medicine, "Several reports show sensory neuropathy at doses
lower than 500 mg per day" (12). As previously mentioned, the Food and
Nutrition Board of the Institute of Medicine has established an upper tolerable
intake level (UL) for vitamin B6 of 100 mg per day for all adults (12). "As
intake increases above the UL, the risk of adverse effects increases (12)."
Selected
Food Sources of vitamin B6
(11)
As the 2000 Dietary Guidelines for Americans state, "Different foods
contain different nutrients and other healthful substances. No single food can
supply all the nutrients in the amounts you need" (38). As the following
table indicates, vitamin B6 is found in a wide variety of foods. Foods such as
fortified breakfast cereals, fish including salmon and tuna fish, meats such as
pork and chicken, bananas, beans and peanut butter, and many vegetables will
contribute to your vitamin B6 intake. If you want more information about
building a healthful diet, refer to the Dietary
Guidelines for Americans and the Food
Guide Pyramid.
Table of
Food Sources of Vitamin B6
| Food |
Milligrams
|
%DV*
|
| Ready-to-eat
cereal, 100% fortified, 3/4 c |
2.00
|
100
|
| Potato,
Baked, flesh and skin, 1 medium |
0.70
|
35
|
| Banana,
raw, 1 medium |
0.68
|
34
|
| Garbanzo
beans, canned, 1/2 c |
0.57
|
30
|
| Chicken
breast, meat only, cooked, 1/2 breast |
0.52
|
25
|
| Ready-to-eat
cereal, 25% fortified, 3/4 c |
0.50
|
25
|
| Oatmeal,
instant, fortified, 1 packet |
0.42
|
20
|
| Pork
loin, lean only, cooked, 3 oz |
0.42
|
20
|
| Roast
beef, eye of round, lean only, cooked, 3 oz |
0.32
|
15
|
| Trout,
rainbow, cooked, 3 oz |
0.29
|
15
|
| Sunflower
seeds, kernels, dry roasted, 1 oz |
0.23
|
10
|
| Spinach,
frozen, cooked, 1/2 c |
0.14
|
8
|
| Tomato
juice, canned, 6 oz |
0.20
|
10
|
| Avocado,
raw, sliced, 1/2 cup |
0.20
|
10
|
| Salmon,
Sockeye, cooked, 3 oz |
0.19
|
10
|
| Tuna,
canned in water, drained solids, 3 oz |
0.18
|
10
|
| Wheat
bran, crude or unprocessed, 1/4 c |
0.18
|
10
|
| Peanut
butter, smooth, 2 Tbs. |
0.15
|
8
|
| Walnuts,
English/Persian, 1 oz |
0.15
|
8
|
| Soybeans,
green, boiled, drained, 1/2 c |
0.05
|
2
|
| Lima
beans, frozen, cooked, drained, 1/2 c |
0.10
|
6
|
| *
DV = Daily Value. DVs are reference numbers based on the Recommended
Dietary Allowance (RDA). They were developed to help consumers determine
if a food contains a lot or a little of a specific nutrient. The DV for
vitamin B6 is 2.0 milligrams (mg). The percent DV (%DV) listed on the
nutrition facts panel of food labels tells you what percentage of the DV
is provided in one serving. Percent DVs are based on a 2,000 calorie
diet. Your Daily Values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie
needs. Foods that provide lower percentages of the DV also contribute to
a healthful diet. |
This fact sheet was developed by
the Clinical Nutrition Service, Warren Grant Magnuson Clinical Center,
National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD, in conjunction with the
Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS) in the Office of the Director of NIH.
The mission of ODS is to strengthen knowledge and understanding of dietary
supplements by evaluating scientific information, stimulating and
supporting research, disseminating research results, and educating the
public to foster an enhanced quality of life and health for the U.S.
population. The Clinical Nutrition Service and the ODS would like to thank
the expert scientific reviewers for their role in ensuring the scientific
accuracy of the information discussed in this fact sheet.