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The water-soluble vitamins demonstrated to be toxic in large doses are:

A. Vitamins A, D, E, K
B. Vitamin C, niacin, Vitamin B6 (pyridoxine)
C. Calcium, Manganese, Vitamin B12 (cobalamins)
D. None of the above; water soluble vitamins never cause toxicity

User Moustapha
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Answer:

B12

Step-by-step explanation:

Looked it up

User Alexdmejias
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Vitamins are classified as either fat soluble (vitamins A, D, E and K) or water soluble (vitamins B and C). This difference between the two groups is very important. It determines how each vitamin acts within the body. Fat soluble vitamins, once they have been stored in tissues in the body, tend to remain there. This means that if a person takes in too much of a fat soluble vitamin, over time they can have too much of that vitamin present in their body, a potentially dangerous condition called hypervitaminosis (literally, too much vitamin in the body). Water-soluble vitamins, including vitamins C and B, are excreted much more quickly than fat-soluble vitamins, and they need to be replaced more frequently.
User Ferran
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