Cobalamin and folate deficiency in the elderly - PubMed (original) (raw)
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Cobalamin and folate deficiency in the elderly
J H Matthews. Baillieres Clin Haematol. 1995 Sep.
Abstract
Elderly persons are more likely to have low values for serum and erythrocyte folate, and for serum cobalamin. Many of those with low vitamin levels have biochemical abnormalities consistent with true deficiency, including increased formiminoglutamic acid excretion, abnormal marrow deoxyuridine suppression, and raised serum levels of methylmalonic acid and homocysteine. Therapy with the appropriate vitamin reverses the biochemical defect. Despite this, the clinical consequences for most elderly persons are remarkably few. True megaloblastic anaemia is rare, and the small number of therapeutic trials to date have not improved the levels of haemoglobin in the treated subjects, although the mean corpuscular volume has decreased significantly. There has been recent concern that these low blood vitamin levels might be important causes of nervous system damage, but studies specifically of the elderly have not demonstrated overall improvements in neurological function following therapy. Vascular damage from high blood homocysteine levels secondary to cobalamin or folate deficiency remains a potential hazard. Dietary insufficiency, malabsorption of protein-bound vitamin B12 secondary to atrophic gastritis, and defective absorption of folyl polyglutamates seem the likeliest possible causes. Pernicious anaemia, although a common cause of severe megaloblastic anaemia in the elderly, is an infrequent cause for the low cobalamin levels in population studies. Although the benefits are uncertain, the balance of the evidence suggests that one should treat elderly persons with low values of cobalamin or folate. Crystalline vitamin B12 and folic acid are absorbed normally and are therefore suitable for replacement therapy, provided that pernicious anaemia is excluded.
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