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The Little Known (But Crucial) Difference Between Folate and Folic Acid

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If I asked you which of these vitamins was found naturally in food, folate or folic acid, would you know the answer? If not, you’re in good company. Medical professionals, nutrition experts, and health practitioners frequently mix up the two, simply because the terms are often used interchangeably.

Many health professionals would even argue that folate and folic acid are essentially the same nutrient. While folic acid is often considered to be a supplemental form of folate, there is an important distinction between these two different compounds. For women past childbearing age, and for men in general, excessive doses of the synthetic form of this nutrient are not necessary, and may even be harmful.

The difference between folate and folic acid?

Folate is a general term for a group of water soluble b-vitamins, and is also known as B9. Folic acid refers to the oxidized synthetic compound used in dietary supplements and food fortification, whereas folate refers to the various tetrahydrofolate derivatives naturally found in food.

The form of folate that can enter the main folate metabolic cycle is tetrahydrofolate (THF). (2) Unlike natural folates, which are metabolized to THF in the mucosa of the small intestine, folic acid undergoes initial reduction and methylation in the liver, where conversion to the THF form requires dihydrofolate reductase.

The low activity of this enzyme in the human liver, combined with a high intake of folic acid, may result in unnatural levels of unmetabolized folic acid entering the systemic circulation.

Several studies have reported the presence of unmetabolized folic acid in the blood following the consumption of folic acid supplements or fortified foods. (3) Human exposure to folic acid was non-existent until its chemical synthesis in 1943, and was introduced as a mandatory food fortification in 1998. (4) Food fortification was deemed mandatory due to overwhelming evidence for the protective effect of folic acid supplementation before conception and during early pregnancy on the development of neural tube defects (NTD) in newborns.

Risks associated with excessive folic acid intake

While the incidence of NTDs in the United States been significantly reduced since folic acid fortification began, there has been concern about the safety of chronic intake of high levels of folic acid from fortified foods, beverages and dietary supplements. (5) One of the major risks associated with excessive intake of folic acid is the development of cancer. (6) In patients with ischemic heart disease in Norway, where there is no folic acid fortification of foods, treatment with folic acid plus vitamin B12 was associated with increased cancer outcomes and all-cause mortality. In the United States, Canada, and Chile, the institution of a folic acid supplementation program was associated with an increased prevalence of colon cancer. (78) A randomized control trial found that that daily supplementation with 1 mg of folic acid was associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer. (9)

Researchers have hypothesized that the excessive consumption of folic acid in fortified foods may be directly related to the increase in cancer rates. Excess folic acid may stimulate the growth of established neoplasms, which can eventually lead to cancer. The presence of unmetabolized folic acid in the blood is associated with decreased natural killer cytotoxicity. (10) Since natural killer cells play a role in tumor cell destruction, this would suggest another way in which excess folic acid might promote existing premalignant and malignant lesions.

A high intake of folic acid might mask detection of vitamin B12 deficiency and lead to a deterioration of central nervous system function in the elderly.

In one study, consumption of folic acid in excess of 400 micrograms per day among older adults resulted in significantly faster rate of cognitive decline than supplement nonusers. (11) Another study found a higher prevalence of both anemia and cognitive impairment in association with high folic acid intake in older adults with a low vitamin B12 status. (12) As vitamin B12 deficiency is a common problem for many older adults, these studies suggest that high folic acid intake could cause serious cognitive consequences in the elderly.

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Folate from natural food sources is best

Despite the risks associated with high levels of folic acid intake, it is well established that adequate folate intake from the consumption of folate-rich foods is essential for health.

Folate aids the complete development of red blood cells, reduces levels of homocysteine in the blood, and supports nervous system function. It is well known for its role in preventing neural tube defects in newborns, so women of childbearing age must be sure to have an adequate intake prior to and during pregnancy.

Excellent sources of dietary folate include vegetables such as romaine lettuce, spinach, asparagus, turnip greens, mustard greens, parsley, collard greens, broccoli, cauliflower, beets, and lentils. (13) Not surprisingly, some of the best food sources of folate are calf’s liver and chicken liver.

You can supplement with folate if your dietary intake is inadequate. Look for products that contain the Metfolin brand, or list “5-methyltetrahydrofolate” or “5-MTHF” on the label. Avoid products that say “folic acid” on the label. Make sure to check your multivitamin because most multis contain folic acid and not folate.

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The Adapt Naturals Core Plus bundle features two products that contain folate. Bio-Avail Multi, a multivitamin/multimineral and phytonutrient blend, contains 680 mcg of the most active form of folate, methyltetrahydrofolate. Bio-Avail Organ contains a blend of five organ meats (live, kidney, heart, pancreas, and spleen), which are among the highest sources of folate in the diet.

Women planning on becoming pregnant should consume between 800 and 1200 mcg of folate per day for several months before the start of pregnancy. Unless you’re consuming chicken or calf’s liver and substantial amounts of leafy greens on a regular basis, it’s difficult to obtain this amount from diet alone. If you’re pregnant or trying to get pregnant, I recommend supplementing with 600-800 mcg of folate per day, depending on your dietary intake. Solgar is a good brand, but there are several others that typically use 5-MTHF including Designs for Health, Thorne, Metabolic Maintenance and Pure Encapsulations.

All other people, such as men and older women, should be able to get plenty of folate in a diet with adequate vegetable consumption, and do not need to supplement.

 
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628 Comments

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  1. For those of you that asked about the Perfect Prenatal from New Chapter, I emailed them and this was their response. I am very confused as a result lol. Any clarification would be helpful:

    We are happy to share that New Chapter’s Organic Probiotic Nutrients multivitamins, which includes Perfect Prenatal, are delivered in the form of whole-food complexes. They do not contain the isolated forms of vitamins and minerals found in conventional supplements. While we use folic acid as a culture catalyst, this is not the form that is found in the final product. The dual-stage probiotic food culturing process we use creates a whole-food complex form of folate. Whole-food complexes serve as carriers for the nutrients across the gut and signal the cells of the body to utilize the nutrients with greater ease and efficiency.

  2. Chris ,

    I have both a multi with folic acid and the garden of life multi with Folate…..I’m 4 weeks pregnant and have been taking them intermited for a couple months. Reading this makes me so confused. I tend to want to take the one with folate, but I worry that it won’t absorb and I won’t get enough for the baby…. On the other hand I love that they are capsules and I feel I can digest a lot better vs the one with folic acid which is a huge tablet that I wonder if it even gets digested. But again the absorption of folate worries me …. Thoughts ?

  3. I recently discovered that chicken feet are a decent source of folate: 86 mcg in 100 grams as compared to broccoli with 108 mcg in 100 grams. These numbers are for both items boiled. The feet can be added to leftover roasted chicken bones to make a nice, gelatinous stock, then removed and reheated gently with an Asian style sauce (or whatever). Delicious double whammy. It also requires meditative eating so as not to choke on tiny bones.

  4. Hi Veronica,

    Of course I don’t know you, but I would recommend trying not to label all your conditions, first of all because it will then seem like you need to address each one separately. Certainly many of these various issues may indeed be helped by some methylfolate, but it is very wise to start out with a very small dose and work up from there. I too have CFS and have had a lot of anxiety related to it (and possible salicylate intolerance issues), and found that methylfolate helped, but had to start slowly. The most recent addition is TMG, or trimethylglycine, which has helped a lot — but it all depends on so many issues — MTHFR is just one of many different genetic polymorphisms that might be an issue for you. Folate could mask b12, so it might be wise to add in some methylb12 and ad-b12 after a few weeks. I’m not a doctor…just a patient…so take what I say and what ANYONE says with a grain of salt.

    The main advice is to start slow with low, low doses. I started with 200 mcgs a day, and now take 800-1600 mcgs, along with the TMG.

    Kelly

    p.s. I too have low stomach acid, as do many with CFIDS, and have to supplement with betaine HCL (Thorne), but also found out I’m very low in zinc, which is needed for HCL production, so am hoping that supplementing with zinc will help that.

  5. I suffer from the following conditions: clinical treatment (medication)-resistant depression, anxiety, adhd, adrenal fatigue syndrome, hypoglycemia, reverse T3 dominance, candida, gluten-sensitivity, and mercury toxicity from amalgam dental fillings. It is believed that I may also be suffering from the following conditions: hypochlorhydria/ achlorhydria, pyroluria, chronic fatigue immune dysfunction syndrome, and high functiong autism/ Asperger’s syndrome even. Does it seem most likely the case that I have an mthfr mutation? If so, would supplementing with a high dosage (10 mgs.) of methylfolate (per se the Metabolic Maintenace brand) most likely be effective but safe for me? Would supplementing with a high dosage of methylfolate mask a vitamin B-12 deficiency as folic acid would? And, finally, like methylcobalamin, is it best if methylfolate is taken sublingually? I would consult with a doctor about my having an Mthfr mutation and undergo the necessary testing, but cannot afford to have this or any other testing done. If someone could please get back to me regarding this, I would greatly appreciate it. Thanks.

  6. I’m curious about Lewis Labs Brewers Yeast — it says it contains Folic Acid, but it also says no additives, and you mention that folate is the food-source form, and folic acid is synthetic. Any insight?

  7. Chris – Also check out the relationship between MTHFR gene mutations and folate.

    See http://www.mthfr.net for info on MTHFR, folic acid, and related diseases such as Alzheimer’s, autism, and cancers.

  8. Hi Chris,

    I usually take Vitasynergy for Women as it’s made from wholefoods but see you recommend the Pure Encapsulations Nutrient 950 with Vitamin K when planning a pregnancy – my question is should I be concerned that many of the ingredients listed are synthetic?

    ‘The nutrients found in Nutrient 950 are derived from the following:
    •Beta carotene: Blakeslea trispora
    •Lycopene: natural tomato concentrate
    •Lutein: marigold flower extract
    •Zeaxanthin: synthetic
    •Vitamin C: corn dextrose fermentation
    •Vitamin E: soybean
    •Vitamin K: synthetic (vitamin K1 and vitamin K2 (MK-4)) and natto (vitamin K2 (MK-7))
    •Vitamin D3: cholesterol from wool fat (lanolin)
    •Vitamin B1 (thiamine HCl): synthetic
    •Vitamin B2 (riboflavin): corn dextrose fermentation
    •Niacinamide and Inositol hexaniacinate: synthetic
    •Vitamin B5 (calcium pantothenate): synthetic
    •Vitamin B6 (pyridoxal HCl): synthetic
    •Vitamin B12 (methylcobalamin): corn dextrose fermentation
    •Folate (as Metafolin, L-5-MTHF)
    •Biotin: synthetic
    •Minerals: naturally derived from limestone

    Sources of the mineral chelates include:
    •Aspartate: derived from soy protein hydrolysis
    •Citrate: corn dextrose fermentation
    •Glycinate: synthetic
    •Picolinate: synthetic’

    • just stumbled upon your question…unless it specifically says that the corn and soy are non-GMO they most likely are. I wouldn’t touch it!

  9. Folic acid supplementation assists cell division. In cancer and healthy cells. Same thing for methylfolate supplements? http://nutritiondiva.quickanddirtytips.com/folic-acid-and-cancer-risk.aspx

  10. Great article. Thanks for the info.
    I am currently taking Pure Encapsulations UltraNutrient and I LOVE them… never had a multivitamin make me truly feel better before I found these. However, I am currently trying to get pregnant.
    This means I need to start taking something else due to the herbs in UltraNutrient.
    Would Nutrient 950 with K be okay to use as my Prenatal?? I have been looking at several others, but hate how most prenatals have so little in the B vitamins. Was thinking my best option if I went with an actual prenatal would probably be the Country Life Maxi Prenatal, but it has folic acid.
    Also, all of this talk about lead in multivitamins and prenatals has me a little nervous. Any input about that area?
    Thanks!

  11. I just wanna know that is it necessary that only at least 3x a week should a man could take foods rich in folate even though its all came from natural food? i mean is it bad eating and absorbing natural foods rich in Vit b12 more often? does it really require an amount of taking foods rich in folate and Vit b12 considering that its all natural?

  12. In the last paragraph I meant to say ;

    I have ordered 1000micrograms of “L-Methylfolate”

  13. If only 10% of the population metabolise synthetic folic acid and a further 40% only convert a limited amount into l-methylfolate, then why in the UK are women with high risk pregnancies prescribed it?

    I had a baby with spina bifida and I’m worried it might happen again. My doctor doesn’t advocate L-methylfolate because she said ‘the studies have only been done on folic acid’ so she could only prescribe this. Before this happened I had never heard of Metafolin or Neevo and I didn’t even know folic acid was sythetic.

    I have ordered 1000micrograms and was planning to take this with my 5mg folic acid the doc prescribed but after reading your article… I’m not sure.

    Please help

  14. Hi Chris,

    Someone may have already asked this, but there are a lot of comments to get through! I’m looking for a good B-complex vitamin, but they all seem to have folic acid instead of folate. What are your thoughts on this, and can you recommend a good B-complex? I’m also already on one of the folate supplements you suggested. I take a probiotic and I’m starting on Natural Calm magnesium as well. I’m working to fix some adrenal fatigue issues. Thanks!

    • My Metagenics Meta B Complex says it contains folic acid, not folate. I’m assuming this is the synthetic variant as I think they’d be very keen to state the ingredient if it was from a natural source. I’ll finish the bottle then change my brand.

  15. It’s funny how year after year they find that individual synthetic nutrients are dangerous so people stop taking that one synthetic vitamin but keep taking all the others. They are studies on all kinds of synthetic vitamins, A, E, C, folic acid causing problems, increasing cancer risk, altering DNA etc. Just stop using all of them. Fortified foods were deadly in studies on dogs.

  16. I don’t understand why but folinic acid does not work for some of us. I’ve read that others have experienced similar problems taking it. It makes both myself and my son feel like we have the flu. Metafolin agrees with us. Dr. Ben Lynch only recommends Metafolin and active folates that start with “L”.

  17. Hi Chris,
    I’ve currently 12 weeks pregnant, and I’ve been taking the Thorne 5-MTHF supplement. I’ve read conflicting things on when one should stop taking a folate supplement though – some midwives seem to say there’s no point in continuing it past the first trimester and that it can actually be harmful in large doses in later pregnancy, while others say to continue until breastfeeding starts. Do you have any thoughts on this?
    Thanks!

  18. We’re still waiting for our genetic results but I already can tell you that these mutations run rampant on both sides of my family. We have a long history of heart disease, cancer, and now my dad has peripheral neuropathy do to low B12. Of course the idiot doctors think 289 is within range and won’t treat for symptoms. I’ve had problems my whole life and have two kids with even more problems. My son is recovering from autism and also has pyroluria and suffers from B12 deficiency. My daughter has pyroluria and other issues too. My son’s nurse practitioner prescribed folinic acid in his compound supp. I take everything he takes and let me tell you that folinic acid causes problems in some of us! I felt like I had the flu and couldn’t move for three days. My son was just as bad. Metafolin agrees with us just fine and I’m mad that we spent $150 on supplements that will never be used. We also have issues taking B12. I think the problem is that it affects potassium levels. Oh the lessons I’ve learned. I’m tired of learning and just want to get on with it.

  19. Firstly, I have to admit, I just skimmed over the article (exam time, quite stressful), so this might have answered my question, but I doubt it. Anyway, so if the packaging of (fresh) vegetables says folic acid they actually mean folate and just got hat wrong?
    Cheers