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by jerf
2210 days ago
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As the article says, D works with other vitamins to do a lot of things. It works with K to help calcium get into your bones. Otherwise you can absorb it and it can hang around in places it's not really supposed to, and that turns out to not be a good thing. You're probably better off with D + K (if you need it) than trying to skimp on D. (I have celiac [1], and I had to learn about this connection the hard way. The horrid thing is that my normal daily lunch was an enormous bowl of leafy greens, exactly where you're supposed to get vitamin K from, and I still had to supplement it. Calcium in the wrong places was one of the contributing factors to my heart issues in the link. I still have to be a bit careful not to eat too much hard cheese, but only slightly more careful than a normal person who faces potentially blocking themselves up anyhow.) [1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22454099 |
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