
— PERSONAL PROTOCOL —
For Alex

Your Personal Supplement Protocol
For: Alex Johson · Analysis date: April 30, 2026
Supplements rebuild your cells from the inside out — slower than medication, but lasting. Plan for at least 3 months of daily use before judging results.
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Analyzed profile
YOUR TOP 5 SUPPLEMENT RECOMMENDATIONS
- 1Coenzyme Q10PRIORITY
100–200 mg daily
LipitorMetforminCondition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueTaking Lipitor and metformin, combined with Type 2 Diabetes and Fatigue, increases your need for Coenzyme Q10 — Lipitor blocks a pathway your body uses to make both cholesterol and Coenzyme Q10, so supplementing helps maintain energy production in your muscles.
- 2Vitamin B12 (Cobalamin)PRIORITY
1000–5000 mcg daily
MetforminCondition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueTaking metformin, combined with Type 2 Diabetes and Fatigue, increases your need for Vitamin B12 (Cobalamin) — Metformin can block your body's ability to absorb Vitamin B12, so supplementing helps prevent fatigue and nerve problems from low levels.
- 3MagnesiumPRIORITY
200–400 mg daily
MetforminCondition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueTaking metformin, combined with Type 2 Diabetes and Fatigue, increases your need for Magnesium — Metformin can lower your magnesium levels, and magnesium helps your body use insulin properly and produce energy in your cells.
- 4Vitamin DPRIORITY
2,000–5,000 IU daily
LipitorCondition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueTaking Lipitor, combined with Type 2 Diabetes and Fatigue, increases your need for Vitamin D — Lipitor lowers cholesterol, which your body uses to make vitamin D from sunlight, so supplementing helps maintain healthy levels.
- 5Alpha-Lipoic AcidPRIORITY
300–600mg daily
Condition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueType 2 Diabetes and Fatigue increases your need for Alpha-Lipoic Acid — Alpha-lipoic acid helps your body use insulin better and may ease nerve pain from diabetes while supporting energy production in your cells.
+ 14 additional recommendations on next page

Additional Recommendations — continued
- 6IronPRIORITY
25–50 mg elemental iron daily
Condition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueType 2 Diabetes and Fatigue increases your need for Iron — Iron helps your body manage blood sugar and energy, but the right amount matters since too much can cause problems with diabetes.
- 7Vitamin B9 (Folate)IMPORTANT
400–1000 mcg daily
MetforminCondition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueTaking metformin, combined with Type 2 Diabetes and Fatigue, increases your need for Vitamin B9 (Folate) — Metformin can interfere with your body's ability to absorb folate, so supplementing helps maintain healthy levels and supports heart health.
- 8SeleniumIMPORTANT
100–200 mcg daily
LipitorCondition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueTaking Lipitor, combined with Type 2 Diabetes and Fatigue, increases your need for Selenium — Lipitor may lower your body's antioxidant defenses, and selenium helps restore those defenses to protect your cells from damage.
- 9High-Quality MultivitaminIMPORTANT
1-2 capsules daily with food
LipitorCondition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueRecommended to address your need for Copper, Pantothenic Acid (B5), Vitamin B1 (Thiamine), Vitamin B6, Vitamin B7 (Biotin), Vitamin C, and Vitamin E based on your health profile. Look for a whole-food based multivitamin with methylfolate (5-MTHF) instead of folic acid, and mineral chelates for better absorption.
- 10CalciumIMPORTANT
500 mg twice daily (1,000 mg total)
Condition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueType 2 Diabetes and Fatigue increases your need for Calcium — Calcium helps your pancreas release insulin properly and supports your body's ability to manage blood sugar levels.
- 11Omega-3 Fatty AcidsIMPORTANT
1000–3000mg EPA/DHA daily
Condition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueType 2 Diabetes and Fatigue increases your need for Omega-3 Fatty Acids — Omega-3 fatty acids help calm inflammation in your body, improve how your cells respond to insulin, and support heart health with type 2 diabetes.
- 12ZincIMPORTANT
15–30 mg daily
Condition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueType 2 Diabetes and Fatigue increases your need for Zinc — Zinc helps your body make and release insulin properly, and diabetes can cause you to lose more zinc through your urine.
- 13Vitamin K2IMPORTANT
90–180 mcg daily
LipitorTaking Lipitor depletes Vitamin K2 — Lipitor may reduce your body's production of vitamin K2, which helps keep calcium in your bones and out of your arteries.
- 14IodineIMPORTANT
150–300 mcg daily
Symptom: FatigueFatigue increases your need for Iodine — Iodine helps your thyroid make hormones that control your energy levels, and low iodine can lead to fatigue.
- 15N-AcetylcysteineIMPORTANT
600–1800mg daily
Symptom: FatigueFatigue increases your need for N-Acetylcysteine — N-Acetylcysteine helps your body make glutathione, a powerful antioxidant that reduces cell damage and may help your muscles resist fatigue.
- 16PotassiumIMPORTANT
99 mg supplement; prioritize dietary sources
Condition: Type 2 DiabetesSymptom: FatigueType 2 Diabetes and Fatigue increases your need for Potassium — This nutrient supports key body functions that may be affected by your health profile.
- 17Vitamin B8 (Inositol)IMPORTANT
2000–4000 mg daily (split doses)
Condition: Type 2 DiabetesType 2 Diabetes increases your need for Vitamin B8 (Inositol) — Vitamin B8 helps your body respond better to insulin and may reduce diabetes complications like nerve damage.
- 18Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin)IMPORTANT
25–50 mg daily
Symptom: FatigueFatigue increases your need for Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin) — Riboflavin helps your cells produce energy, and low levels can contribute to feeling tired or fatigued throughout the day.
- 19L-CarnitineIMPORTANT
1000–3000mg daily
Symptom: FatigueFatigue increases your need for L-Carnitine — L-Carnitine helps your body convert fat into energy, which may reduce your fatigue by supporting better energy production.
Important Safety Information
Supplements to use with caution
- Chromium — May enhance blood sugar lowering - monitor glucose levels

Clinical Decision Support
Clinical supplement analysis report
Reference ID: AF4C409D
Report summary
- Patient name
- Alex Johson
- Analysis date
- April 30, 2026
- Prepared by
- Supplement Intelligence
Clinical overview
This report analyzes 2 medications, 1 condition, and 1 symptom to identify nutrient depletions and recommend targeted supplementation. Findings are ranked by clinical priority based on the number of sources flagging each nutrient.
Medications analyzed
- Lipitor
- Metformin
Conditions & symptoms analyzed
Conditions
Symptoms
Key nutrient depletions
- Coenzyme Q10Significant
Statins inhibit HMG-CoA reductase, which blocks the mevalonate pathway.
Sources:
Lipitor, Metformin, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- Vitamin B12 (Cobalamin)Significant
Metformin competitively inhibits calcium-dependent membrane receptors in the ileum required for absorption of the vitamin B12-intrinsic factor complex.
Sources:
Metformin, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- MagnesiumSignificant
Metformin affects magnesium absorption and renal handling; hyperglycemia independently increases urinary magnesium loss, compounding depletion risk.
Sources:
Metformin, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- Vitamin DSignificant
Cholesterol is a substrate for vitamin D synthesis (7-dehydrocholesterol in skin converts to cholecalciferol on UV exposure).
Sources:
Lipitor, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- Alpha-Lipoic AcidSignificant
Powerful antioxidant that regenerates other antioxidants; improves insulin sensitivity; reduces diabetic neuropathy symptoms; enhances glucose uptake
Sources:
Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- IronSignificant
Elevated glucose levels and medications may affect iron status; however, excess iron is also problematic; requires individualized assessment
Sources:
Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- Vitamin B9 (Folate)Moderate
Metformin may reduce intestinal folate absorption and alter folate metabolism, potentially contributing to elevated homocysteine levels over time.
Sources:
Metformin, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- SeleniumModerate
Statins may reduce selenium-dependent antioxidant enzyme activity; clinical relevance unclear.
Sources:
Lipitor, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- High-Quality MultivitaminModerate
Recommended to address your need for Copper, Pantothenic Acid (B5), Vitamin B1 (Thiamine), Vitamin B6, Vitamin B7 (Biotin), Vitamin C, and Vitamin E based on your health profile.
Sources:
Lipitor, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- CalciumModerate
Involved in insulin secretion; works synergistically with vitamin D; adequate intake may reduce diabetes risk; supports metabolic function
Sources:
Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- Omega-3 Fatty AcidsModerate
Anti-inflammatory properties reduce chronic inflammation; improves insulin sensitivity; reduces cardiovascular risk factors; modulates lipid metabolism
Sources:
Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- ZincModerate
Essential for insulin synthesis, storage, and secretion in pancreatic beta cells; increased urinary zinc loss in diabetes; antioxidant properties protect against oxidative stress
Sources:
Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- Vitamin K2Moderate
Statins inhibit vitamin K2 synthesis via mevalonate pathway suppression, potentially affecting bone and cardiovascular health.
Sources:
Lipitor
- IodineModerate
Essential for thyroid hormone synthesis; deficiency causes hypothyroidism with reduced metabolic rate and energy levels
Sources:
Fatigue
- N-AcetylcysteineModerate
Precursor to glutathione; reduces oxidative stress and may improve muscle fatigue resistance
Sources:
Fatigue
- PotassiumModerate
Insulin promotes cellular potassium uptake; some diabetes medications cause potassium loss; important for insulin secretion and glucose metabolism
Sources:
Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
- Vitamin B8 (Inositol)Moderate
Component of insulin signaling pathway; may improve insulin sensitivity; reduces diabetic complications including neuropathy
Sources:
Type 2 Diabetes
- Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin)Moderate
Component of FAD and FMN involved in electron transport chain; deficiency reduces mitochondrial energy production
Sources:
Fatigue
- L-CarnitineModerate
Transports long-chain fatty acids into mitochondria for beta-oxidation; supplementation may improve energy production in certain conditions
Sources:
Fatigue
Supplement recommendations
CoQ10
- Form
- Ubiquinol (reduced form) preferred over ubiquinone for patients over 40 or with significant depletion. Ubiquinone acceptable for younger patients.
- Dose
- 100–200 mg daily
- Timing
- Take with a meal containing fat — CoQ10 is fat-soluble.
- Cautions
- May modestly reduce warfarin (INR) effect — monitor if patient is anticoagulated.
- Sources
- Lipitor, Metformin, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Methylcobalamin
- Form
- Methylcobalamin or hydroxocobalamin preferred over cyanocobalamin — directly bioavailable, no methylation step required. Sublingual or lozenge form preferred for patients on metformin or PPIs (impaired GI absorption).
- Dose
- 1000–5000 mcg daily
- Timing
- Take in the morning — may be activating. Sublingual form: dissolve under tongue for 60–90 seconds.
- Cautions
- Confirm with serum B12 and MMA testing before high-dose supplementation in older adults. Caution with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy.
- Sources
- Metformin, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Magnesium Glycinate
- Form
- Glycinate or malate preferred — well absorbed, gentle on GI tract. Avoid magnesium oxide (poor absorption, causes diarrhea).
- Dose
- 200–400 mg daily
- Timing
- Evening dosing supports sleep quality and muscle relaxation.
- Cautions
- Reduce dose if loose stools occur. Caution with severe renal impairment.
- Sources
- Metformin, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Vitamin D3 (Cholecalciferol)
- Form
- D3 (cholecalciferol) preferred over D2 (ergocalciferol). Combine with Vitamin K2 (MK-7, 90–180 mcg) to direct calcium to bone rather than vasculature.
- Dose
- 2,000–5,000 IU daily
- Timing
- Take with largest meal of the day (fat-soluble). Evening dosing may affect sleep in sensitive individuals.
- Cautions
- Monitor 25(OH)D serum levels annually. Target: 40–60 ng/mL. Caution with granulomatous disease (sarcoidosis) or hypercalcemia.
- Sources
- Lipitor, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Alpha-Lipoic Acid
- Form
- R-ALA (R-alpha-lipoic acid) preferred over racemic ALA — more bioavailable and better tolerated.
- Dose
- 300–600mg daily
- Timing
- Take on empty stomach for best absorption. Split dose if GI sensitive.
- Cautions
- May lower blood sugar — monitor closely in diabetics. Avoid high doses in thiamine deficiency.
- Sources
- Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Iron Bisglycinate
- Form
- Bisglycinate chelate has high bioavailability and significantly less GI irritation than ferrous sulfate. Take with vitamin C for enhanced absorption.
- Dose
- 25–50 mg elemental iron daily
- Timing
- Take on empty stomach if tolerated. If GI upset, take with small meal.
- Cautions
- Avoid taking with calcium, antacids, or dairy. Do not use without confirmed deficiency.
- Sources
- Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
L-Methylfolate (5-MTHF)
- Form
- L-Methylfolate (5-MTHF) preferred over folic acid — bypasses MTHFR conversion and is directly bioavailable. Avoid synthetic folic acid, especially in MTHFR variants and methotrexate users.
- Dose
- 400–1000 mcg daily
- Timing
- Take with food. Can be taken as part of a B-complex.
- Cautions
- Do not use folic acid in patients with active untreated B12 deficiency — masks anemia while neurologic damage progresses. Confirm B12 status first. Caution with anti-seizure medications.
- Sources
- Metformin, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Selenium (Selenomethionine)
- Form
- Selenomethionine form preferred over selenite — superior bioavailability and tissue retention. Brazil nuts are a potent dietary source (1–2 nuts ≈ daily requirement).
- Dose
- 100–200 mcg daily
- Timing
- Take with food.
- Cautions
- Do not exceed 400 mcg/day (UL) — chronic excess causes selenosis (hair loss, brittle nails, neuropathy). Caution with anticoagulants.
- Sources
- Lipitor, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
High-quality multivitamin with minerals
- Form
- Whole-food based multivitamin preferred. Look for methylfolate (5-MTHF) instead of folic acid, and mineral chelates (glycinate, citrate) for better absorption.
- Dose
- 1-2 capsules daily with food
- Timing
- Take with largest meal of the day to improve absorption of fat-soluble vitamins.
- Cautions
- Avoid high-dose isolated nutrients without clinical indication. Separate from thyroid medications by 4 hours.
- Sources
- Lipitor, Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Calcium Citrate
- Form
- Calcium citrate required for patients on PPIs — does not require stomach acid for absorption, unlike calcium carbonate. Split doses for better absorption.
- Dose
- 500 mg twice daily (1,000 mg total)
- Timing
- Take with meals. Split into 2 doses — absorption limited to ~500 mg per dose.
- Cautions
- Avoid excessive doses. Do not take with iron supplements simultaneously.
- Sources
- Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Fish Oil
- Form
- Triglyceride form preferred over ethyl ester. Look for molecularly distilled, third-party tested for heavy metals.
- Dose
- 1000–3000mg EPA/DHA daily
- Timing
- Take with meals containing fat — improves absorption and reduces fish burp.
- Cautions
- Use caution with blood thinners (warfarin, aspirin). Discontinue 2 weeks before surgery.
- Sources
- Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Zinc Picolinate
- Form
- Picolinate or bisglycinate forms preferred for absorption. Take separately from ACE inhibitor dose to prevent chelation.
- Dose
- 15–30 mg daily
- Timing
- Take with food to reduce nausea. Separate from calcium and iron by 2 hours.
- Cautions
- Do not exceed 40 mg/day (UL). Long-term high-dose zinc can cause copper deficiency — consider copper 1–2 mg if using >30 mg zinc.
- Sources
- Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Vitamin K2 (MK-7)
- Form
- Menaquinone-7 (MK-7) — natto-fermented or synthesized; 72-hour half-life supports once-daily dosing. Activates osteocalcin (bone matrix protein) and matrix Gla-protein (vascular calcification inhibitor), routing dietary and supplemental calcium to bone rather than arterial walls. Synergistic with vitamin D3 — pair for bone density and cardiovascular calcification prevention.
- Dose
- 90–180 mcg daily
- Timing
- With largest fat-containing meal (fat-soluble). Once-daily dosing sufficient given long half-life. Consistent daily timing if patient is on warfarin.
- Cautions
- WARFARIN — relative contraindication; requires INR monitoring and anticoagulation provider oversight before initiation, dose change, or discontinuation; DOACs (apixaban, rivaroxaban, dabigatran) — no significant interaction; pregnancy/lactation — limited data, use only under provider guidance; concurrent high-dose vitamin E (>400 IU daily) may blunt K-dependent carboxylation; severe hepatic disease may impair activation. Best paired with vitamin D3 (1000–5000 IU) for synergistic bone and cardiovascular benefit.
- Sources
- Lipitor
Iodine (Potassium Iodide)
- Form
- Potassium iodide or kelp-derived iodine. Lugol's solution available for higher therapeutic doses under provider supervision. Confirm thyroid status before high-dose use.
- Dose
- 150–300 mcg daily
- Timing
- Take with food. Separate from thyroid medication by 4 hours.
- Cautions
- Contraindicated in autoimmune thyroiditis (Hashimoto's, Graves) without provider supervision — can trigger flares. Do not exceed 1100 mcg/day (UL) without monitoring.
- Sources
- Fatigue
NAC
- Form
- N-Acetyl Cysteine — standard pharmaceutical grade. Avoid effervescent forms with added sugar.
- Dose
- 600–1800mg daily
- Timing
- Take on empty stomach or with light meal. Avoid taking with activated charcoal.
- Cautions
- Avoid with nitroglycerin or activated charcoal. May cause GI upset at higher doses.
- Sources
- Fatigue
Potassium (dietary + supplement)
- Form
- Dietary sources preferred (banana, avocado, leafy greens, legumes). Supplement with potassium gluconate or citrate if dietary intake insufficient. Monitor serum levels.
- Dose
- 99 mg supplement; prioritize dietary sources
- Timing
- With food. Do not crush or chew slow-release formulations.
- Cautions
- Monitor serum potassium if on ACE inhibitor, ARB, or potassium-sparing diuretic. High-dose supplementation should be medically supervised.
- Sources
- Type 2 Diabetes, Fatigue
Myo-Inositol
- Form
- Myo-inositol preferred for insulin sensitivity, mood, and PCOS support. 40:1 ratio of myo- to D-chiro-inositol is well-studied for metabolic and ovarian function.
- Dose
- 2000–4000 mg daily (split doses)
- Timing
- Take with food, split into 2 doses (morning and evening). Powder form mixes easily in water.
- Cautions
- Generally well-tolerated. May cause mild GI upset at higher doses — start low and titrate up.
- Sources
- Type 2 Diabetes
Riboflavin (B2)
- Form
- Riboflavin or riboflavin-5-phosphate (R5P — activated coenzyme form, preferred when MTHFR variants or FAD-dependent enzyme dysfunction suspected). High-dose (400 mg daily) evidence-based for migraine prophylaxis (Schoenen 1998).
- Dose
- 25–50 mg daily
- Timing
- With food to minimize mild GI upset. Split doses above 100 mg. Bright yellow-green urine discoloration is harmless and indicates absorption.
- Cautions
- Generally very well-tolerated with no established upper intake level. Reduces tetracycline absorption and vice versa (separate dosing by 2 hours). Probenecid decreases riboflavin renal excretion (may increase levels). Anticholinergics may increase intestinal absorption. Theoretical photosensitization risk at very high doses with concurrent UV/phototherapy. No known major drug or condition contraindications.
- Sources
- Fatigue
L-Carnitine
- Form
- L-Carnitine tartrate preferred for athletic performance. Propionyl-L-Carnitine preferred for cardiovascular support.
- Dose
- 1000–3000mg daily
- Timing
- Take 30–60 minutes before exercise or with meals.
- Cautions
- May increase TMAO levels with high red meat intake — discuss with patients on cardiovascular protocols.
- Sources
- Fatigue

Cautions and disclaimers
- This report is generated by an AI-assisted clinical tool and is intended for informational and educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
- Always consult your healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any supplement regimen, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, have a medical condition, or are taking prescription medications.
- Nutrient depletion data is based on published clinical research. Individual responses to supplementation vary. Regular monitoring of nutrient levels through laboratory testing is recommended.
- Supplement Intelligence and its creators assume no liability for actions taken based on the information contained in this report.
References
Research supporting the clinical findings in this report.
Coenzyme Q10
- • Banach M et al. Statin therapy and plasma coenzyme Q10 concentrations: a systematic review and meta-analysis of placebo-controlled trials. Pharmacol Res. 2015;99:329-336.
- • Bansal AB, Cassagnol M. HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors. StatPearls. 2024. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK542212/
- • Corcoran C, Jacobs TF. Metformin. StatPearls. 2024. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK518983/
Magnesium
- • Corcoran C, Jacobs TF. Metformin. StatPearls. 2024. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK518983/
Vitamin B12 (Cobalamin)
- • Ankar A, Kumar A. Vitamin B12 Deficiency. StatPearls. 2024. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK441923/
- • de Jager J et al. Long term treatment with metformin in patients with type 2 diabetes and risk of vitamin B-12 deficiency: randomised placebo controlled trial. BMJ. 2010;340:c2181.
Vitamin B9 (Folate)
- • Corcoran C, Jacobs TF. Metformin. StatPearls. 2024. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK518983/
- • de Jager J, Kooy A, Lehert P, et al. Long term treatment with metformin in patients with type 2 diabetes and risk of vitamin B-12 deficiency. BMJ. 2010;340:c2181.
Vitamin D
- • Sizar O, Khare S, Goyal A, Givler A. Vitamin D Deficiency. StatPearls. 2024. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK532266/
Vitamin K2
- • Okuyama H, Langsjoen PH, Hamazaki T, et al. Statins stimulate atherosclerosis and heart failure: pharmacological mechanisms. Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol. 2015;8(2):189-199.