That headline is alarmist and misleading. Vitamin B12 is generally very safe, and there is no common “dangerous mix” that applies to most people in everyday life.
What’s actually true
Vitamin B12 (Vitamin B12) can interact in a few specific medical situations, but not in a scary “never mix” way.
Real interactions (not “dangerous consequences” for most people):
1. Metformin (diabetes medication)
- Long-term use of metformin can lower B12 levels
- Doctors often recommend B12 supplementation, not avoid it
2. Acid-reducing drugs
- Proton pump inhibitors (e.g., omeprazole) or antacids may reduce B12 absorption over time
3. Nitrous oxide (medical gas)
- Can inactivate B12 temporarily in the body (relevant only in medical/surgical settings)
What is NOT true
- There is no everyday food or normal supplement that makes B12 “dangerously toxic”
- B12 does not become harmful when combined with standard vitamins, food, or minerals
- It is a water-soluble vitamin, so excess is usually excreted
Why these posts go viral
They use fear-based wording like:
- “NEVER MIX”
- “DANGEROUS CONSEQUENCES”
- “DOCTORS WON’T TELL YOU”
But they rarely specify a real drug interaction or medical context.
Bottom line
Vitamin B12 is safe for most people, and in some cases (like metformin use) it’s actually recommended, not avoided.
If you want, you can show me the full post or “this thing” they say not to mix it with—I can check if there’s any real science behind it or if it’s pure clickbait.