The Open General & Internal Medicine Journal




    (Discontinued)

    ISSN: 1874-0766 ― Volume 6, 2014

    Update of Food-Cobalamin Malabsorption and Oral Cobalamin Therapy


    The Open General & Internal Medicine Journal , 2009, 3: 4-10

    Emmanuel Andrès, Josep Vidal-Alaball, Laure Federici, Oliver Lidove, Jacques Zimmer, Georges Kaltenbach

    Service de Médecine Interne,Diabète et Maladies Métaboliques, Clinique Médicale B, Hôpital Civil – Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg, 1 porte de l’Hôpital, 67091 Strasbourg Cedex, France;.

    Electronic publication date 6/3/2009
    [DOI: 10.2174/1874076600903010004]




    Abstract:

    Cobalamin (vitamin B12) deficiency is particularly common in the elderly (>65 years of age), but is often unrecognized because its clinical manifestations are subtle; however, they are also potentially serious, particularly from a neuropsychiatric and hematological perspectives. In the general population, the main causes of cobalamin deficiency are pernicious anemia and food-cobalamin malabsorption. Food-cobalamin malabsorption syndrome, which has only recently been identified, is a disorder characterized by the inability to release cobalamin from food or its binding proteins. This syndrome is usually caused by atrophic gastritis, related or unrelated to Helicobacter pylori infection, and long-term ingestion of antacids and biguanides. Management of cobalamin deficiency with cobalamin injections is currently well codified, but new routes of cobalamin administration (oral and nasal) are being studied, especially oral cobalamin therapy for food-cobalamin malabsorption.


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