Vitamin B12, also known as cobalamin, is a water-soluble vitamin which is found mostly in animal foods in fortified cereals. It cannot be synthesized in the human body.
Dietary cobalamin is liberated from ingested animal protein by gastric hydrochloric acid. The free vitamin is then complexed with intrinsic factor, released from gastric parietal cells, and the complex is absorbed in the terminal ileum.
Cobalamin has several functions in the human body, including neurologic development, red blood cell production, and DNA synthesis.
There are three important reactions which require this vitamin as a cofactor:
- the production of methionine from homocysteine
- the production of succinyl coenzyme a from methylmalonic acid
- the demethylation of 5-methyl tetrahydrofolate to tetrahydrofolate in animals
Clinical features of vitamin B12 deficiency are subtle at first. Plasma levels sink slowly because of the large reserve in the liver. More sensitive and early markers of deficiency include a rise in the levels of homocysteine and of methylmalonic acid.
Manifestations of Deficiency
These include hematologic, neurologic, and psychiatric features.
Hematologic
Vitamin B12 deficiency is classically associated with megaloblastic macro-ovalocytic anemia. The hemoglobin concentration is elevated, rather than reduced in most patients, while total hemoglobin levels fall. However, almost a third of patients show a normal hemoglobin level.
Pancytopenia develops at a later stage. Folate deficiency is also known to cause megaloblastic anemia, and this should be checked for. Patients with anemia have pallor, tachycardia, weakness, and easy fatigability, and may complain of palpitations.
Neurologic
Vitamin B12 deficiency can cause paresthesia, peripheral neuropathy, and a serious irreversible deficiency disease known as subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord, with demyelination damage to both the corticospinal and dorsal columns of the spinal tract. Weakness and gait impairment may result.
It is important in cases of suspected folate deficiency to first rule out vitamin B12 deficiency. This is because folate supplementation produces a correction in the hematologic indices which may mask the deficit in vitamin B12, while acutely worsening neurologic symptoms, or precipitating subacute degeneration.
Psychiatric
Vitamin B12 deficiency can cause poor memory, cognitive loss, irritability and personality changes, depression, and dementia. Psychosis is rare but has been known to occur.
Cutaneous
Vitamin B12 deficiency can cause hyperpigmentation or vitiligo.
Gastrointestinal
Vitamin B12 deficiency manifests in the digestive tract as inflammation of the tongue, or glossitis, with or without jaundice.
Pregnancy and Lactation
Neural tube defects are more common in children born to women with low vitamin B12 levels. Infants who are exclusively breastfed by women with vitamin B12 deficiency have a higher risk of failure to thrive, and show slow development, anemia, weakness, and hypotonia or ataxia.
Cardiovascular
Vitamin B12 deficiency causes an early and sustained rise in serum homocysteine levels – this is a known risk factor for atherosclerotic disease.
References
- http://www.aafp.org/afp/2011/0615/p1425.html
- http://www.aafp.org/afp/2003/0301/p979.html#sec-1
- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3257642/
Further Reading
- All Vitamin B12 Content
- Vitamin B12 Deficiency
- Causes of Vitamin B12 Deficiency
- Managing Vitamin B12 Deficiency
- How is Vitamin-B12 Related to Anemia?
Last Updated: Feb 27, 2019
Written by
Dr. Liji Thomas
Dr. Liji Thomas is an OB-GYN, who graduated from the Government Medical College, University of Calicut, Kerala, in 2001. Liji practiced as a full-time consultant in obstetrics/gynecology in a private hospital for a few years following her graduation. She has counseled hundreds of patients facing issues from pregnancy-related problems and infertility, and has been in charge of over 2,000 deliveries, striving always to achieve a normal delivery rather than operative.
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