Episode 17: Why "Normal" B12 Isn't Enough for Women Over 40

If your B12 lab came back "normal" but you still feel tired, foggy, and slower to recover than you used to, new research suggests you are not imagining it.

Cornell University researchers have been studying vitamin B12 with new tools, and what they are finding is changing what "normal" actually means for women in their 40s, 50s, and 60s.

The standard reference range was built decades ago to catch severe deficiency. Energy, mitochondrial function, and the way you want to feel on a Tuesday afternoon were never the metric.

For women in their 40s, 50s, and 60s, that gap is the difference between a normal lab and feeling like yourself.

In this episode:

  • Why "in range" is not the same as healthy, and how the B12 reference range was set using populations that don't reflect women over 40

  • What new Cornell research reveals about B12, mitochondrial dysfunction, and the kind of fatigue that does not go away

  • The 5 hidden reasons B12 drops in women 40–65: low stomach acid, acid reducers, plant-leaning diets, reproductive history, and gut health

  • The 2 functional lab markers most doctors don't run, and why they tell a different story than the standard panel

  • 4 practical steps to rebuild B12 status with whole foods your body actually recognizes

Whether you're navigating perimenopause fatigue, postpartum depletion, unexplained brain fog, or just the slow drain of "I used to be able to do this and now it costs more", this conversation is for you.

"In range" is not the same as healthy.


Research Mentioned

This episode is an educational translation of the following peer-reviewed research. Click any citation to read the original paper.

  1. Cornell-led research on B12 and skeletal muscle mitochondrial energy production. Source: SciTechDaily article, “New Research Shows Vitamin B12 May Hold the Key to Healthy Aging” (scitechdaily.com/new-research-shows-vitamin-b12-may-hold-the-key-to-healthy-aging/).

  2. 2024 review on vitamin B12, aging, and inflammation. Source: PMC11084641 (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11084641/).

  3. Functional medicine practitioner threshold of roughly 400 to 500 pg/mL. Source: documented in functional medicine clinical guidance (Cleveland Clinic Center for Functional Medicine, IFM literature, common practice in functional medicine).

  4. B12 absorption mechanisms in aging women. Sources: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements B12 fact sheet (ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/VitaminB12-HealthProfessional/) for atrophic gastritis prevalence, PPI/H2 blocker effects on B12 absorption, vegetarian diet considerations, and intrinsic factor dependency.

  5. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “Iron · The Nutrition Source.” Reference resource on heme vs. non-heme iron absorption. https://nutritionsource.hsph.harvard.edu/iron/

  6. Nowak D, Jakubczyk E. “The Freeze-Drying of Foods: The Characteristic of the Process Course and the Effect of Its Parameters on the Physical Properties of Food Materials.” Molecules, 2020. PMC7603155. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7603155/

  7. Kabeer S, et al. “Dehydration and the Preservation of Bioactive Compounds in Nutrient-Dense Foods.” PMC9998808. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9998808/

  8. “Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) Review of Traditional and Modern Uses.” Heliyon, 2023. doi:10.1016/j.heliyon.2023 (S2405844023100491) https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844023100491

  9. Medical News Today. “Slippery elm: Benefits, uses, and side effects.” Reference resource on mucilage and digestive support. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/slippery-elm

  10. Shoba G, Joy D, Joseph T, et al. “Influence of Piperine on the Pharmacokinetics of Curcumin in Animals and Human Volunteers.” Planta Medica, 1998. The foundational human trial on piperine bioavailability enhancement. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9619120/

  11. Densmore F. How Indians Use Wild Plants for Food, Medicine and Crafts. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology, 1928. Documents Ojibwe traditional plant medicine, including slippery elm and yarrow.

  12. Smith HH. Ethnobotany of the Ojibwe Indians. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee, 1932. Documents traditional Ojibwe uses of slippery elm bark, yarrow, and a wide range of native plants.

  13. USDA FoodData Central. Nutrient density data for grass-fed beef liver. Used for the “most nutrient-dense food” reference. https://fdc.nal.usda.gov/

  14. “Organ Meat Nutrient Density and Bioavailability.” PubMed Central, PMC11435426 and PMC11174546. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11435426/https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11174546/

Links Mentioned

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  • If you've spent the last few years wondering what's wrong with you and landing on yourself as the answer, this episode is for you. You are tired. The fog has gotten thicker, you move slower than you used to, and the answer you keep coming back to is that you're failing at something basic, like eating or sleeping or staying disciplined. The honest answer might be smaller than that. It might be a vitamin in your body that stopped absorbing the way it used to. You are not the villain in this story, but you know what is the super rushed 15-minute doctor's appointment. That is the gap this episode is about. Welcome to Wild Wise. I'm Sara Estes, a former private investigator who ditched the high stress legal life after a major health crisis. I rebuilt my health from the ground up through nutrition and functional medicine

    and now I'm here to uncover the truth about women's wellness and translate it so you can make informed decisions about your health. On this podcast, we break down women's nutrition and physiology with real research and actionable tips. And here's the core philosophy: what's found in nature is often exactly what our biology is wired to thrive on. We get nerdy with the science, but keep it practical for everyday life. If you're ready to understand what your body actually needs, you're in the right place. As always, this podcast is educational, not medical advice. Please talk to your healthcare provider before making any changes. Let's jump in. Today we are going to be talking about B12. Let's start with a number. Now, the reference range for vitamin B12 on a standard lab is wide. On a typical lab core panel, it runs from about 232 to 1,245 picograms per milliliter. Anything inside that range is called normal. Here's what normal tells you: it tells you whether you have a textbook deficiency. It tells you whether your body has fallen far enough below the line that someone in a 15-minute appointment needs to act on it. But here's what normal does not tell you whether your body is using B12 the way it used to, whether you have enough of it to make the energy at the rate your day demands, whether the lower third of the range is healthy for the body you are actually living in. In range is not the same as healthy. That sentence right there, that is the spine of this episode, and that's what I want to dig into today. The textbook definition of B12 deficiency was built around preventing pernicious anemia and the most severe nerve symptoms. It was not built around energy, recovery, brain fog, or what aging does to the body's ability to absorb B12 from food. That history matters here. The reference range was set using populations that were not stratified by age, by reproductive history, or by the conditions that affect B12 absorption later in life. The range is wide because the original goal was clinical, catch the people who are unambiguously sick. The range was never designed to optimize for the way a 50-year-old woman, let's say, wants to feel on a Tuesday afternoon. A woman can sit in the lower third of the reference range, get told she's fine, and still feel the things that low B12 status looks like in real life. Tired, foggy, slower to recover from a busy day, less able to think on her feet than she used to be. In range is not the same as healthy. B12 is a vitamin a lot of women have heard of, and very few women have been told much about. Here's the short version in very plain language. B12 is what biochemists call a cofactor. A cofactor is a helper that your cells need to do certain jobs. Without the cofactor, the job either doesn't happen or happens slowly. This is one of the concepts that sounds technical and lands practically. If your cells need a part to do a job and the part is in short supply, the job slows down. Multiply that across thousands of small jobs your body is running every minute, and you start to see why a low end of normal cofactor can show up as something as plain as I'm tired by the afternoon. Your cells use B12 for three big jobs. First is making energy, specifically the kind of energy your cells produce inside their own power plants. The second is keeping your nerves healthy and the protective coating around them intact. The third is repairing your DNA so your cells can divide cleanly and your tissues can renew the way they're supposed to. The textbook B12 story focused on that second job, the nerve systems, the anemia, those are real. They're also the late stage version. The early version, the one a lot of women in this age range are living, is subtler. Lower stamina, slower thinking, the sense that you used to be able to do this so easy and now it's more difficult. That subtler picture is exactly where the new research is pushing the conversation. Researchers at Cornell University have been studying vitamin B12 with new tools. Their findings have been getting attention in science press recently, including a new summary in SciTech Daily. Here's what they found. In animal models, B12 deficiency disrupted the function of the mitochondria. Mitochondria are the power plants of your cells. They are where your body's energy is actually made. If the power plants aren't working efficiently, no amount of sleep or coffee or willpower fixes that gap. In aged animals, B12 supplementation improved mitochondrial function. Power plants came back online, essentially. Energy production picked up. What does mitochondrial dysfunction actually feel like? Again, in plain language, it feels like effort that doesn't pay back. You sleep eight hours and you wake up tired. You eat a real breakfast and then you crash mid-morning. You used to be able to handle Tuesday and now Tuesday handles you. The mechanism the Cornell researchers are pointing at is part of why. The researchers also linked B12 to cellular metabolism, to the stress pathways inside the cells, and to how cells decide which of their genes to read as we age. That last part is from a field called epigenetics. Epigenetics is just the body's library of decisions about which instructions to follow at any given time. Two important caveats before we go further. The Cornell research is in animal models, not yet in human clinical trials. The science press coverage noted that itself, so we are looking at a direction, not exact proof yet. We're also looking at mechanism, not a recommended dose for women. But here's what I find so compelling. This is the second new piece of B12 research recently pointing in a similar direction. A separate review of the literature published in 2024 looked specifically at marginal B12 status, meaning the low end of normal rather than deficient. The review found associations between marginal B12 and DNA damage, oxidative stress, mitochondrial strain, chronic inflammation, frailty, and cognitive decline as people age. Again, these are associations, meaning it's a direction, not a verdict, but direction matters, especially as research is developing. The main takeaway here: the science is starting to support what a lot of women have already been feeling. B12 may matter long before the labs call it deficient. Now, here's why this conversation lands harder for women in their 40s, 50s, and 60s than for almost any other demographic. Five things stack up against B12 status in this age range. First is stomach acid. As the body ages, stomach acid production drops. This condition has a name, atrophic gastritis, and it's more common than most women have been told. Stomach acid is what frees B12 from food in the first place. Without enough acid, the body's ability to absorb B12 from a meal goes down. Atrophic gastritis can also be silent. It doesn't always show up as a classic acid reflux or indigestion. A lot of women in this age range have it and they've never been told. The second is medications. Acid reducers like proton pump inhibitors and H2 blockers used long term, they impair B12 absorption by design. So a lot of women in this age range have been on them for years. And that includes the over-the-counter versions too, not only the prescription ones. Long-term use of an acid reducer you bought at the drugstore is not neutral for B12 status. The third is diet. Vegetarian-leaning diets have a real place, but they also reduce B12 intake because B12 is concentrated in animal foods. If you've been eating less meat and more plants for 10 years, your B12 input has been declining, whether you noticed or not. And the trait here is real: a woman who has been eating the way her doctor or her trainer told her to eat for a decade, leaning more plant forward, may have done a lot of things right, of course, and still ended up with a B12 picture nobody warned her about. The fourth is reproductive history. Decades of menstruation, pregnancies, postpartum recoveries. Each of those events draws on the body's B12 stores, and the demand doesn't stop the year a woman starts menopause. Eggs are not the only thing that your body uses up over a long reproductive arc. The cofactors that supported each cycle, each pregnancy, each recovery, got drawn down to. The fifth is the gut itself. Long histories of digestive issues, low intrinsic factor, gut inflammation, gastrointestinal surgeries, all of those affect the body's ability to absorb B12 even from a perfect diet. The gut is the gate. If the gate is leaky, if it's inflamed or surgically rerouted, like say your gallbladder got removed, what you eat is not what you absorb. The same lab number, let's say 200 picagrams per milligram, can mean two different things on two different bodies. On a 30-year-old, it might be enough. On a 55-year-old, whose stomach acid is lower, whose absorption has changed, whose demand has grown, that same number can mean she's running on empty in real life while her labs call her fine. This is why in range stops being a useful answer somewhere in this decade range. And what is the actual number becomes the more useful question. And I'll give you an example here, which is mine. I had my blood work drawn and my B12 came back at like 375. So that was inside the reference range, but the lower third. So if you scanned through all of the lab work, it was just like normal, normal, normal, you're fine. But then I took the lab work to my functional medicine practitioner. And she read the same number and had a very different reaction. So she wanted to see it higher. And we started digging into that. And she had been hearing what I was describing and what I was feeling, fatigue patterns that I'd been blaming on mom brain and the toddler years, recovery issues that I had been just pushing through. And so I started supplementing with real food, like B Forgun Nutrition, that has very high B12. So if you've ever held a printout that said your number was normal and you knew something was off, that's what I'm talking about. The lab has its job, but your body also has its data. They are both real, but they just don't always agree. Here's the practical part: four things you can do with what we just covered. Number one, pay attention to patterns. Fatigue, brain fog, recovery, stamina, the ability to think under pressure. Those patterns are data. Write them down if you have to. Doctors are good at numbers, but they sometimes need help seeing the patterns that the numbers are missing. Your typical PCP or doctor's appointment is 15 minutes. Your body's data is like 20 years, 30 years, 40 years long. A handwritten log of what you've been feeling, when, and what makes it better or worse is one of the most useful things you can bring to that room. Number two, look at your own life for the five risk factors I just named. Are you on an acid reducer? Have you been eating less animal food than you used to? Have you been through pregnancies or long menstrual history? Has your digestion changed in the last decade? If you said yes to any of those, your B12 conversation may be more interesting than the standard panel suggests. Walk through the five we just covered. Be honest with yourself. Some of these you can change, some of these you can't, but both kinds matter. Number three, ask your provider about deeper testing. The standard B12 number is the screening lab. Their functional markers, methamelonic acid, homocysteine being the two most common that can show whether a normal B12 number is actually doing the job. Whether or not you order them is a conversation to have with your provider. And remember, a wider lab panel is not always the answer. Sometimes the conversation is the answer. A great practitioner who will actually sit down and read the lab and the symptoms together is worth more than a stack of expensive run tests alone. Four, build a daily routine around food the body recognizes and uses well. Whole food, bioavailable, dense in cofactors, gentle on the gut. The body knows what to do with food it can recognize. It struggles more with isolated synthetic doses arriving in formats biology never evolved to handle. So, what does food the body recognizes look like, especially in this conversation of B12? So that's gonna look like beef liver and red meat from animals that are raised on grass, grass-fed animals, eggs, fish, dark leafy greens for the cofactors that pair with B12, fermented foods for the gut environment. The list is much older than the supplement aisle, and a lot of your grandmother's kitchens and your great-grandmother's kitchens, they knew it before we did. Healthy aging is not about doing one dramatic thing. One of my favorite sayings is little by little becomes a lot. Healthy aging is about consistent support for the body in forms it can recognize before depletion becomes a new normal. That last point is exactly the philosophy that we at Sarenova built Formula No. 06 around: grass-fed beef organ superfoods that are naturally rich in B12 and the cofactors that work with it, two plants for gut comfort, Yarrow and Slippery Elm, and then Black Pepper as the absorption helper. It's a daily ritual that's actually built around the idea that the body recognizes whole foods and uses them well, where it sometimes struggles with synthetic isolates and high dose multivitamins. And things are getting exciting around here. Sarenova launches publicly on May 27th. If you join the wait list before then, you're gonna get two things. You'll get early access to Formula No. 06, a day ahead of the public launch. Now, the reason why that's important is that we are probably gonna sell out. There's a limited inventory on this first run, and there's been a lot of demand. So if you're on the wait list, you're gonna get early access. So that way you can get it before it sells out because I cannot make any guarantees on the 27th as to how long it will last. And then number two, you're gonna get the founding member pricing that's gonna be locked in for life. That's a huge one. The wait list is open right now at sarenova.com. That's sarenova.com. All right, that is it for this episode of Wild is Wise. Thank you so much for being here and for listening as always. And if this resonated with you, if you've got a friend who needs to hear this, please share it and hop over and give us a review on Apple Podcasts. It helps other people find the show and we would really appreciate it. Until next time, stay wild, stay wise. I'll see you next week.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Is a “normal” B12 level always enough for women over 40?

Not always. Lab reference ranges for B12 were mainly designed to catch clear, medical deficiency, not to define what feels best for energy and brain function in your 40s, 50s, and 60s. A woman in her 40s, 50s, or 60s can be in the “normal” range on paper but still be on the low side for her body and feel tired, foggy, or slower to bounce back from busy days. In other words, a normal number and feeling your best are not always the same thing.

Q: Why is my B12 “normal” but I am still tired?

Because the basic B12 test is a yes-or-no screen for deficiency, not a full report on how well your cells are using B12. The mitochondria that make your energy depend on B12 and other cofactors to run their machinery. When B12 is low or just scraping by, those tiny power plants can underperform even if your lab slip looks fine. You can sleep eight hours, have a “normal” result, and still feel like someone turned down your internal dimmer switch.

Q: What are common signs of low B12 in women over 40?

They are often more subtle than the textbook anemia and nerve damage you read about online. In women 40 to 65, low B12 more often looks like: persistent fatigue, brain fog, feeling like your stamina is not what it used to be, and needing more time to bounce back after busy days. Many women file these under “I’m just getting older” or “perimenopause,” when B12 status may be one of the easier levers to check.

Q: Why does B12 tend to drop as women get older?

Because several body changes in this era pile up on the same nutrient. Stomach acid often declines with age, and you need that acid to free B12 from food. Long-term acid reducers make that job even harder. Years of periods, pregnancies, and breastfeeding raise your demand for B vitamins, while plant-leaning diets or eating less meat can lower your intake. Add in gut changes that affect absorption, and the same B12 number can mean something very different at 55 than it did at 25.

Q: What did the new B12 research from Cornell-affiliated scientists actually show?

That B12 is tied into your energy machinery more deeply than just “don’t be anemic.” In animal and cell studies, low B12 disrupted how mitochondria produced energy and increased signs of stress and damage inside those cells. When B12 was restored, parts of that mitochondrial function improved, especially in older animals. It is not final human proof yet, but it draws a clear map between B12 status, cellular energy, and how we age.

Q: Can low B12 cause brain fog?

It can absolutely contribute. B12 helps maintain the myelin coating that lets nerve signals travel quickly, and it supports key chemical reactions in the brain. When B12 is low or borderline, those systems can slow down. That can feel like losing your edge: slower recall, trouble finding words, or the sense that thinking on your feet costs more effort than it used to.

Q: Do acid reducers like PPIs really affect B12 levels?

They can, especially when you take them for years. Stomach acid is what pulls B12 off the protein in your food so you can absorb it. Strong acid reducers, including PPIs and H2 blockers, turn that acid way down. Over time, that can leave you absorbing less B12 from the exact same diet. If you have been on an acid reducer long-term, a “normal” B12 screening test may need a closer look or more detailed follow-up.

Q: Does perimenopause affect B12 levels?

Indirectly, yes. By the time perimenopause starts, most women have already logged decades of cycles, pregnancies, and postpartum recoveries, which all draw on B vitamins. At the same time, stomach acid can be lower, gut issues can be more common, and eating patterns often shift. Perimenopause arrives on top of those trends, so it is less “perimenopause drains your B12” and more “this season of life stacks several B12 stressors at once.”

Q: What is the most bioavailable form of B12?

For a healthy gut, the B12 in animal foods is extremely well used by the body. Liver, red meat, eggs, and fish are naturally rich sources, and they show up bundled with other nutrients that support B12’s work. Supplemental forms like cyanocobalamin or methylcobalamin are purified versions that your body absorbs through slightly different routes. They can be very effective, especially at higher doses or when absorption is impaired, but they do not bring the same full nutrient matrix that whole-food animal sources do.

Q: Is beef liver a good source of B12 for women?

It is one of the best whole-food sources you can choose. Beef liver packs very high levels of B12 alongside iron, folate, choline, and other nutrients that support blood, brain, and energy metabolism. For women who have gone light on animal protein or want a dense daily source of these cofactors, beef liver or carefully sourced beef organ products can be a powerful tool. If you already have a diagnosed B12 deficiency, you still want a clinician guiding whether you also need supplements or injections.

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Episode 16: Inside Formula No. 06: The Gut-Energy Connection Women Need to Understand