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Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin)

water-soluble

Key Takeaways

  • Precursor to coenzymes FMN and FAD, required by 90+ flavoproteins
  • Plays roles in citric acid cycle, beta-oxidation, and amino acid metabolism
  • Emerging evidence supports use in migraine prophylaxis in adults
  • FDA daily value is 1.3 mg
  • Required for biosynthesis of CoA, CoQ, heme, and pyridoxal 5-phosphate

Evidence Spectrum

15 studies reviewed →
Strong (1)
Moderate (1)
Emerging (1)

Migraine prophylaxis

Review of 11 studies found riboflavin reduces migraine frequency in adults with no serious side effects.13

Cellular energy metabolism

Established precursor to FMN/FAD required by 90+ human flavoproteins.2

Neuroprotection via glutamate modulation

In vitro: inhibits glutamate release via calcium/PKC suppression.4

15

Studies Reviewed

1.3 mg

RDA (Adults (FDA Daily Value))

water-soluble

Solubility

Role in the Body

Vitamin B2 (riboflavin) is an essential dietary compound used for the enzymatic biosynthesis of FMN and FAD. The human genome contains 90 genes encoding flavin-dependent proteins (pmid:23500531). The majority catalyze oxidation-reduction reactions in the citric acid cycle, beta-oxidation, and amino acid degradation. Riboflavin also has neuroprotective properties, inhibiting glutamate release from synaptosomes (pmid:34477538).

  • Precursor to FMN and FAD coenzymes
  • Required for citric acid cycle and beta-oxidation
  • Biosynthesis of CoA, CoQ, heme, pyridoxal 5-phosphate
  • Neuroprotective via glutamate modulation

Supplement Forms

Riboflavin (free form)

Recommended

Bioavailability: 0.6%

Standard supplement; absorption saturates ~27 mg/dose

Riboflavin 5-phosphate (FMN)

Recommended

Bioavailability: 0.6%

Active coenzyme form

Food Sources

Dairy products

Eggs

Lean meats

Fortified cereals

Almonds

Mushrooms

Spinach

Deficiency

Prevalence: Uncommon in developed countries due to fortification; concern in dairy-limited diets.

Symptoms:

  • Angular cheilitis
  • Glossitis
  • Seborrheic dermatitis
  • Sore throat
  • Photophobia

Risk Factors:

  • Vegan/dairy-free diets
  • Chronic alcoholism
  • Elderly with poor intake

Safety & Interactions

Possible Side Effects:

  • Well tolerated; bright yellow urine at high doses (pmid:26780280)

Drug Interactions:

  • Required for B6 activation to pyridoxal 5-phosphate
  • Involved in folate metabolism

Contraindications:

  • No known contraindications

Frequently Asked Questions

What does B2 do?

Precursor to FMN/FAD coenzymes required by 90+ flavoproteins for energy, fat oxidation, and cofactor synthesis.

Can B2 help migraines?

Evidence suggests 200-400 mg/day reduces migraine frequency in adults.

Research Sources

15 peer-reviewed studies analyzed from PubMed. 4 directly cited in this review.

View All Sources