If you have sustained an injury and lost blood, of course your first goal should be to seek immediate medical attention. After treatment, it is important to provide your body with the nutrients necessary to produce new blood cells. Keep in mind that injury is not the only cause of blood loss. You may also need to replenish your blood supply after giving birth, heavy menstrual bleeding or donating blood. You lose iron when you lose blood. Continued iron deficiency can cause anemia, a condition caused when your body does not have enough red blood cells. Eating foods with calcium, B vitamins, folate, vitamin C and vitamin K will also help your body replenish its blood supply.
Fruits and Vegetables
Fruits, such as bananas, contain vitamin B-6. Photo CreditPolka Dot Images/Polka Dot/Getty Images
Eating fruits and vegetables will provide your body with vitamin C, folate, vitamin K and vitamins B-1, B-6 and B-12. Vitamin C helps your body absorb iron. Folate and vitamin B-12 help to form red blood cells. Vitamin K helps your blood coagulate, or clot. Vitamins B-1 and B-6 help your heart and keep red blood cells healthy. Citrus fruits, including kiwi, oranges, berries and pineapple, are a source of vitamin C. Vitamin B-6 can be found in bananas and avocado. Asparagus and romaine lettuce can boost your folate levels. Green, leafy vegetables can provide vitamin C, vitamin K and folate. Peas are a source of vitamin B-1.
Meat, Poultry and Fish
Fish is one of the best sources of iron. Photo CreditMASH/Digital Vision/Getty Images
The best sources of iron are meat, poultry and fish. Your body does not absorb iron from plant sources as efficiently as iron from animal sources. According to the National Institutes of Health, if you are a vegetarian, you will need to consume twice as much iron each day as a non-vegetarian. In her book, "Nutrition and Diagnosis-Related Care," Sylvia Escott-Stump writes that dark green, leafy vegetables, tofu, molasses and nuts can provide vegetarians with iron. Stump is the dietetic program director for the Department of Nutrition Science at East Carolina University, and in 2011 served as president of the American Dietetic Association. Lean meat and poultry also provide vitamins B-1, B-6 and B-12. Vitamin K can be found in beef, fish and liver.
Beans, Nuts and Grains
Beans can replenish iron, folate and B vitamin supplies. Photo Credit Liquidlibrary/liquidlibrary/Getty Images
Vegans and vegetarians can replenish iron, folate and B vitamin supplies by eating beans, lentils, nuts and grains. Foods like chickpeas, peanut butter and wheat germ are also filled with blood-building nutrients. Some cereals and breads are iron-fortified or iron-enriched. Read the nutritional label information to make certain.
Dairy
Dairy products and milk provide you with vitamin B-1 and B-12.Photo Credit Jupiterimages/Creatas/Getty Images
Dairy products, including milk and yogurt, as well as soy milk and eggs, provide you with vitamin B-1 and B-12. If you are a vegan or vegetarian, be aware that consuming dairy products can affect your absorption rates of non-heme iron, iron not derived from animal sources. It's especially important for you to increase your intake of vitamin C to assist with iron absorption.