Liquid Vitamin Facts about Absorption

Posted October 23rd, 2005 by admin

Liquid vitamin facts regarding absorption have been questioned. It’s time to address the questionable liquid vitamin facts.

Liquid vitamin facts have really taken a beating from the pill form vitamin supporters. I am going to use this discussion and many to follow to focus on the questionable liquid vitamin facts.

First of all, how can vitamins absorb into the blood stream. The first thing that must happen is breaking down the ingested nutrition in to its simplest form. This doesn’t include the destruction of nutrients. In order for any nutrient to be absorbed into the blood stream, it must be in its simplest form. Liquid vitamins are in the simplest form eliminating the need for digestion. You actually start absorbing valuable vitamins and minerals in your mouth’s mucus membrane, and your esophagus. Here are just two more pathways liquid vitamins offer for absorption that pills simply can not offer, unless you chew your pills? Sometimes this might be the only way to swallow a large pill like this!

Now that the supplements are in the stomach, they remain in here mixed with stomach digestive juices such as hydrochloric acid and some enzymes, including pepsin, rennin, and traces of lipase. Your pill vitamins begin their process of supplementing vitamins at this point where your liquid vitamin has already supplement nutrients to your body.

Both supplements remain here for a few hours until all ingested material is broken down into its simplest form. The small intestine is the next leg of the race where the villa offers a permeable membrane for simplified nutrients to enter the blood stream if they are digested properly. After the small intestine and large intestine, I think everyone can figure out the remainder of the journey.

If you are still curious about the destruction of vitamins and minerals in the presence of acid, I encourage you to return for more explanation, liquid vitamin myths and liquid vitamins facts.

Daniel Weigum


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