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ForumsNutrition & SupplementationMicronutrient deficiency risk on GLP-1 — B12, D, iron, zinc, folate Page 2

Micronutrient deficiency risk on GLP-1 — B12, D, iron, zinc, folate

B12Beth Fri, Mar 13, 2026 at 8:29 PM 10 replies 106 viewsPage 2 of 2
marco_milano
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Mar 13, 2026 at 11:19 PM#6

Genuine question — is there a risk of over-supplementing? I see people taking like 10 different supplements and I worry about just throwing pills at problems. Can you take too much B12 or D?

Last edited: Mar 14, 2026 at 3:19 AM
14 5kevin_tulsa, Dr.PainCLE, mike_mealprep and 11 others
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JessicaM_2024
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Mar 13, 2026 at 11:36 PM#7

Valid concern. Quick answers:

B12: Water-soluble, excess is excreted in urine. Very difficult to overdose. Supplementing without deficiency is unnecessary but not harmful.

Vitamin D: Fat-soluble, CAN accumulate to toxic levels — but this is extremely rare at doses under 10,000 IU/day. 2000-4000 IU is well within safe limits. Testing is still recommended to dial in your dose.

Iron: This one you do NOT want to take unnecessarily. Excess iron is harmful. Only supplement if bloodwork shows deficiency or low ferritin. Don't just take it "because it might help."

General rule: get tested, supplement what's deficient, retest to confirm you're in range. Don't blindly take everything.

45 10NicoleRaleigh, james_edin, FranDenver and 42 others
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Dr.KarenChen
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Mar 13, 2026 at 11:53 PM#8

Adding data to this thread. I've tracked my bloodwork quarterly since starting tirzepatide. Here's my B12 and D trajectory:

B12: 380 → 310 → 245 → 198 (downward trend, caught it before clinical deficiency)

Vitamin D: 32 → 28 → 22 → 38 (dropped, then recovered after starting D3 supplementation at month 6)

The B12 decline was linear and predictable. If I hadn't been tracking, I would have hit deficiency by month 12. This is why regular monitoring matters — you can catch the trend before symptoms start.

44 5TomFromTexas, mike.trainer_LA, sarah_nash92 and 41 others
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Dr.MetabolicMD
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Mar 14, 2026 at 12:10 AM#9

This is exactly the kind of proactive monitoring everyone should be doing. I wish I'd been tracking from the start instead of waiting until I felt terrible.

To everyone reading this thread: you don't need to wait for symptoms. Ask for baseline bloodwork when you START your GLP-1 medication, then recheck every 3-6 months. It's cheap insurance. 🩸

16 1Dr.ObesityMed, HealthEcon_DC, PedsEndoPhilly and 13 others
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