Guest guest Posted December 23, 2008 Report Share Posted December 23, 2008 Colleagues, the following is FYI and does not necessarily reflect my own opinion. I have no further knowledge of the topic. If you do not wish to receive these posts, set your email filter to filter out any messages coming from @nutritionucanlivewith.com and the program will remove anything coming from me. --------------------------------------------------------- Brain Volume, Vitamin B12 and the Elderly http://www.vitasearch.com/CP/experts/AVoldiatzoglouAT10-12-08.pdf Vogiatzoglou, MSc. Department of Physiology Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Le Gros Building South Parks Rd., Oxford OX1 3QX, UK 00441865272196 anna.vogiatzoglou@... “Vitamin B12 Status and Rate of Brain Volume Loss In Community-Dwelling Elderly, " Neurology, 2008;71(11):826-32. 46641 (10/2008) Kirk Hamilton: Can you please share with us your educational background and current position? Vogiatzoglou: I am a registered dietician with an MSc. in clinical nutrition and I am currently a research assistant in the University of Oslo while in the last year of my Ph.D. at the University of Oxford. 1KH: What got you interested in studying the role of vitamin B12 and brain volume loss? AV: My interest lies in the study of vitamin B12 and its relation to cognitive function. Vitamin B12 has recently received increasing attention in the medical community because increasing data suggest that low B12 status may increase the risk of cognitive impairment and dementia. KH: What is the biochemistry of vitamin B12 that might actually affect the volume of the brain? What is the mechanism? AV: Shrinkage of the brain has been linked to cognitive function and decline. Low levels of plasma B12, within what is usually considered to be the normal range, can affect brain volume possibly by disturbing the integrity of brain myelin, through inflammation or disturbance of metabolic pathways. Vitamin B12 is important for the maintenance of a healthy nervous system. Nerves are surrounded by an insulating fatty sheath comprised of a complex protein called myelin. B12 plays a vital role in the metabolism of fatty acids essential for the maintenance of myelin. Prolonged B12 deficiency can lead to nerve degeneration and irreversible neurological damage. Low concentrations of B12 may also influence brain function through metabolic pathways such as methylation reactions in the brain. However, further work is required to establish whether these associations are causal. KH: Can you explain what holotranscobalamin is and why it is an accurate measure of vitamin B12 status? What are the levels of vitamin B12 deficiency, insufficiency, and sufficiency with regards to holotranscobolamin? And serum vitamin B12 levels? AV: Cobalamin (vitamin B12) is absorbed and distributed by three proteins; intrinsic factor, transcobalamin and haptocorrin. Intrinsic factor is needed for B12 uptake in the intestine and plasma transcobalamin is responsible for transport of the vitamin to all cells of the body. The portion of cobalamin bound to transcobalamin is called holotranscobalamin. Holotranscobalamin represents the biologically active fraction of B12 available for tissue uptake and therefore has been proposed as a potential indicator of B12 status and a more useful marker than plasma B12. Levels of holotranscobalamin <35 pmol/L are considered low while levels of plasma B12 <150 pmol/L are considered deficient. KH: Why did you measure methylmalonic acid as a functional test of vitamin B12 insufficiency? AV: We measured methylmalonic acid (MMA) as it is a sensitive and early indicator of B12 deficiency at the tissue level. MMA is a compound that is usually produced in very small amounts during amino acid (protein) metabolism. Normally, B12 acts as a cofactor in the conversion of methylmalonyl CoA to succinyl CoA. If there is not enough B12 to act as a cofactor, then methylmalonyl CoA concentrations begin to rise and the body converts the methylmalonyl CoA to MMA instead. This causes MMA levels to rise in both the blood and the urine when B12 levels are low. Increased concentrations of MMA are often detectible before the occurrence of the hematologic changes (for example, anemia and large red blood cells) seen with B12 deficiency. Some patients with MMA elevations may not have any symptoms at all while others may have neuropathy (numbness and tingling in the hands and feet) or mental or behavioural changes (confusion, irritability, depression), symptoms that are often seen with classic B12 deficiency. KH: Can you tell us about your study and the basic results? AV: This is a study of 107 healthy volunteers living in Oxfordshire, UK aged 61 to 87. They were recruited following advertisements and were carefully screened to exclude any with cognitive impairment at the start. All volunteers underwent brain scans (CT, MRI and SPECT), memory testing and physical exams once a year for up to 5 years. Blood samples were collected each year to measure B12 levels and many other substances, such as folate, homocysteine, methylmalonic acid, holotranscobalamin, etc. The aim of the study was to identify factors that predict cognitive decline and which are associated with changes in brain scans, such as loss of tissue volume. The MRI scans were of the whole volume of the brain and serial scans were subtracted from each other using software developed in Oxford by Prof. Steve . This enables small changes (less than 1% per year) to be measured accurately. The study found that elderly people who had higher vitamin B12 levels in the blood are less likely to experience brain shrinkage compared with those who had lower levels, but still within the normal range. Our study suggests, but does not prove, that by modifying our vitamin B12 status we might be able to protect our brain and so possibly prevent cognitive decline. KH: What are the risk factors to vitamin B12 insufficiency in the elderly? AV: Vitamin B12 deficiency is a major public health problem, particularly among the elderly, as it is estimated to affect 10%–15% of people >60 years. The most common causes of vitamin B12 deficiency are malabsorption and low dietary intake. Both causes become more common with age. Malabsorption of B12 can result from many causes. The most common causes are an autoimmune condition known as pernicious anemia and food-bound vitamin B12 malabsorption. Conservative estimates indicate that 2%–3% of the population has or will develop pernicious anaemia (type A chronic atrophic gastritis), caused by failure of gastric intrinsic factor production (a protein needed for B12 uptake in the intestine). The prevalence of B12 deficiency due to food-bound B12 malabsorption may be as high as 30% among the elderly. This condition is usually caused by a chronic inflammation of the lining of the stomach (atrophic gastritis), which ultimately results in gastric atrophy. In this condition, food-bound B12 is not released, and can therefore not be bound to intrinsic factor. Other causes of malabsorption are:  The chronic use of a number of drugs such as antiepileptic agents (carbamazepine, phenytoin, primidone), proton pump inhibitors (omeprazole), histamine (H2) receptor antagonists (cimetidine, ranitidine), antidiabetic drug metformin, antibiotics (chloramphenicol, neomycin)  Diseases such as pancreatic insufficiency, hyperthyroidism, diabetes mellitus, renal insufficiency, Zollinger –Ellison syndrome, intestinal diseases, especially of the ileum (celiac disease, Crohn’s disease, ileitis)  Defective transport of vitamin B12 due to genetic polymorphisms.  Also smoking and regular alcohol intake Dietary deficiency can be caused due to a strict vegetarian (vegan) diet or due to a poor diet usual in the elderly. Moreover, increased needs (pregnancy and breastfeeding, anaemia, haemodialysis) can lead to B12 deficiency. KH: What would you recommend as far as vitamin B12 supplementation in the elderly? What would the daily dose be? Should the elderly be supplemented at all? AV: Vitamin B12 supplementation has been found to improve B12 status, correct anemia due to B12 deficiency and prevent birth defects in infants. However, studies have provided mixed results on the improvement of cognitive function, mainly because the trials were not well designed. In this study we did not look at whether taking vitamin B12 supplements would slow the rate of shrinkage of the brain. Three years ago we started a trial to look at this question, in which we are giving elderly people with memory problems B vitamins (folate, B6 and B12) and scanning their brains at the start and after two years. See: http://controlledtrials. com/ISRCTN94410159 . The results of this trial will be known in 2009. So, we think it is too early to advise people to take B12 supplements to prevent their brains from shrinking. What we can say, is that our results suggest that rather than maintaining one’s B12 at a level that is ‘just above’ the cut-off for deficiency it might be prudent to aim to keep it higher up the normal range. This can be achieved by dietary means by eating plenty of the foods that are a good source of B12, such as milk (low-fat, preferably), fish, meat and, in the USA, fortified breakfast cereals. A varied diet should provide enough vitamin B12 to prevent deficiency in most individuals 50 years of age and younger. However, the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies recommends that individuals over the age of 50 should get most of their vitamin B12 from vitamin supplements or fortified food because of the high incidence of impaired absorption from foods that come from animals in this age group. KH: When should people be screened for vitamin B12 sufficiency? Should we use holotranscobolamin or serum vitamin B12 levels? If so what are the optimal levels we are aiming for? AV: Vitamin B12 or cobalamin deficiency is considered a frequent disorder, especially among elderly patients, but is often unrecognized because the initial clinical manifestations are subtle and non-specific or are attributed to the normal aging process. Because of the potential seriousness and irreversibility of the symptoms (particularly neurological), detection and treatment of early stages of cobalamin deficiency is important. Elderly >60 years should check regularly their serum B12 and consult their physician. The diagnosis of B12 deficiency has traditionally been based on low serum vitamin B12 levels, usually less than 200 pg/mL (148 pmol/L), along with clinical evidence of disease. However, studies indicate that older patients tend to present neuropsychiatric disease in the absence of hematologic findings. Measurements of metabolites such as MMA and homocysteine have been shown to be more sensitive in the diagnosis of B12 deficiency than measurement of serum B12 levels alone. A simple, reliable, accurate and generally accepted screening tool for measuring vitamin B12 status is not available. There are several markers of B12 status but each one of them separately has low diagnostic accuracy. The ones most commonly used are:  Decreased concentrations of plasma B12 which is the standard clinical screening test.  Increased concentrations of homocysteine and MMA that are generally considered more sensitive metabolic markers of B12 status.  Decreased concentrations of plasma holotranscobalamin, which has been suggested as a more sensitive marker of B12 status because holotranscobalamin is the biologically active fraction of total B12 that can be delivered into all cells. Low B12 status can be detected more accurately by measuring all of these markers together. In our study we use all of these markers of B12 status, which is one of the strengths of the study. However, it is not easy to use all these markers in every day practice. Measurement of serum B12 is firstly ordered and if low-normal levels are detected a follow-up of homocysteine and MMA is usually ordered. Measurement of holotranscobalamin is currently not widely available to use for routine clinical practice as it is expensive and has not yet been sufficiently evaluated. KH: Since plasma vitamin B12 is so easy to measure can you please share what levels of plasma vitamin B12 within the normal range may be more optimal? > 500 pmol/L than the classic deficiency levels of < 200 pg/ml (148 pmol/L)? AV: As mentioned above, the diagnosis of B12 deficiency has traditionally been based on low B12 levels, usually less than 200 pg/ml (148 pmol/L). For adults, the lower limit of B12 is approximately 170–250 pg/ml (120–180 pmol/liter). This number is based on the level associated with the most severe manifestation of deficiency, pernicious anemia. The normal blood level of B12 ranges between 200 and 600 pg/ml (148-443 pmol/l). However, normal and deficiency values for serum or plasma vitamin B12 may vary from lab to lab and from country to country. A number of studies have suggested a higher cut off point than the 148 pmol/L typically used for B12 deficiency. The findings of our study also suggest that B12 levels >300 pmol/L would be optimal and protect against anemia and neurological symptoms. KH: Do you have any further comments on this very interesting subject? AV: More research is needed into the relationship between nutrition and the brain, in particular dementia. This is a poorly funded area in comparison with molecular biology and yet it has the potential to save millions of people world-wide from developing brain diseases. -- ne Holden, MS, RD " Ask the Parkinson Dietitian " http://www.parkinson.org/ " Eat well, stay well with Parkinson's disease " " Parkinson's disease: Guidelines for Medical Nutrition Therapy " http://www.nutritionucanlivewith.com/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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