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- Vitamin B12 -
General
Information:
Names: Vitamin
B12, cobalamin, cyanocobalamin, methylcobalamin
Wikipedia entry:
Vitamin B12, vitamin B12 or vitamin
B-12, also called cobalamin, is a water soluble vitamin with a
key role in the normal functioning of the brain and nervous
system, and for the formation of blood. It is one of the eight
B vitamins. It is normally involved in the metabolism of every
cell of the human body, especially affecting DNA synthesis and
regulation, but also fatty acid synthesis and energy
production. As the largest and most structurally complicated
vitamin, it can be produced industrially only through
bacterial fermentation-synthesis.
Vitamin
B12 consists of a class of chemically-related compounds
(vitamers), all of which have vitamin activity. It contains
the biochemically rare element cobalt. Biosynthesis of the
basic structure of the vitamin in nature is only accomplished
by simple organisms such as some bacteria and algae, but
conversion between different forms of the vitamin can be
accomplished in the human body. A common synthetic form of the
vitamin, cyanocobalamin, does not occur in nature, but is used
in many pharmaceuticals and supplements, and as a food
additive, because of its stability and lower cost. In the body it is converted to
the physiological forms, methylcobalamin and
adenosylcobalamin, leaving behind the cyanide, albeit
in minimal concentration. More recently, hydroxocobalamin (a
form produced by bacteria), methylcobalamin, and
adenosylcobalamin can also be found in more expensive
pharmacological products and food supplements. The utility of
these is presently debated...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_b12
Dr. Ray Shahelien
entry:
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Observations:
Vitamin B12
(cobalamin,
cyanocobalamin,
methylcobalamin)
The content of this section has
been moved to the Vitamin B12 page.
Wikipedia entry:
Vitamin B12, vitamin B12 or vitamin
B-12, also called cobalamin, is a water soluble vitamin with a
key role in the normal functioning of the brain and nervous
system, and for the formation of blood. It is one of the eight B
vitamins. It is normally involved in the metabolism of every
cell of the human body, especially affecting DNA synthesis and
regulation, but also fatty acid synthesis and energy production.
As the largest and most structurally complicated vitamin, it can
be produced industrially only through bacterial
fermentation-synthesis.
Vitamin
B12 consists of a class of chemically-related compounds
(vitamers), all of which have vitamin activity. It contains the
biochemically rare element cobalt. Biosynthesis of the basic
structure of the vitamin in nature is only accomplished by
simple organisms such as some bacteria and algae, but conversion
between different forms of the vitamin can be accomplished in
the human body. A common synthetic form of the vitamin,
cyanocobalamin, does not occur in nature, but is used in many
pharmaceuticals and supplements, and as a food additive, because
of its stability and lower cost. In the body it is converted to the physiological forms,
methylcobalamin and adenosylcobalamin, leaving behind the
cyanide, albeit in minimal concentration. More
recently, hydroxocobalamin (a form produced by bacteria),
methylcobalamin, and adenosylcobalamin can also be found in more
expensive pharmacological products and food supplements. The
utility of these is presently debated...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_b12
The diabetes medication metformin may interfere with B12
dietary absorption.
B12 and Alzheimer's
Disease
Vitamin
B12 May Reduce Risk of Alzheimer's Disease
ScienceDaily
(Oct.
18, 2010) — A new study shows that vitamin B12 may protect
against Alzheimer's disease, adding more evidence to the
scientific debate about whether the vitamin is effective in
reducing the risk of memory loss... The study found that for
each micromolar increase in the concentration of homocysteine,
the risk of Alzheimer's disease increased by 16 percent, whereas
each picomolar increase in concentration of the active form of
vitamin B12 reduced risk by two percent. The results stayed the
same after taking into account other factors, such as age,
gender, education, smoking status, blood pressure and body mass
index. The addition of folate did not appear to raise or lower
the risk of Alzheimer's disease...
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/10/101018162922.htm
B12 and Vascular
Dementia (VD)
B-Vitamin
Deficiency
May Cause Vascular Cognitive Impairment
ScienceDaily
(Sep.
2, 2008) — A deficiency of B-vitamins may cause vascular cognitive impairment,
according to a new study. Researchers at the Jean Mayer USDA
Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts
University used an experimental model to examine the metabolic,
cognitive, and microvascular effects of dietary B-vitamin
deficiency. "Metabolic impairments induced by a diet deficient
in three B-vitamins -folate, B12 and B6- caused cognitive
dysfunction and reductions in brain capillary length and density
in our mouse model," says Aron Troen, PhD, the study's lead
author. "The vascular changes occurred in the absence of
neurotoxic or degenerative changes."...
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080902095110.htm
B-vitamin deficiency causes
hyperhomocysteinemia and vascular cognitive impairment in mice
Aron M.
Troen*, Melissa Shea-Budgell, Barbara Shukitt-Hale, Donald E.
Smith, Jacob Selhub, and Irwin H. Rosenberg
Jean
Mayer U.S. Department of Agriculture Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging, Tufts University, 711 Washington Street,
Boston, MA 02111-1524
Communicated
by
Leon E. Rosenberg, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, June 5,
2008 (received for review July 20, 2007)
Abstract
In
older adults, mildly elevated plasma total homocysteine
(hyperhomocysteinemia) is associated with increased risk of
cognitive impairment, cerebrovascular disease, and Alzheimer's
disease, but it is uncertain whether this is due to underlying
metabolic, neurotoxic, or vascular processes. We report here
that feeding male C57BL6/J mice a B-vitamin-deficient diet for
10 weeks induced hyperhomocysteinemia, significantly impaired
spatial learning and memory, and caused a significant
rarefaction of hippocampal microvasculature without concomitant
gliosis and neurodegeneration. Total hippocampal capillary
length was inversely correlated with Morris water maze escape
latencies (r = −0.757, P < 0.001), and with plasma total
homocysteine (r = −0.631, P = 0.007). Feeding mice a
methionine-rich diet produced similar but less pronounced
effects. Our findings suggest that cerebral microvascular
rarefaction can cause cognitive dysfunction in the absence of or
preceding neurodegeneration. Similar microvascular changes may
mediate the association of hyperhomocysteinemia with human
age-related cognitive decline...
http://www.pnas.org/content/105/34/12474
Other ailments
Another resource is the book
Here is one reader review from Amazon.com:
I am an MD, a nutritional physician,
and a psychiatrist (Canadian-board-certified) who has been
studying vitamin B12 extensively since 1976, and applying that
knowledge in my private nutritional, metabolic and psychiatric
practice in Tucson AZ since 1994 (and Portsmouth VA before
that).
This
book is an outstanding compilation of anecdotes, references and
experiences on the "underground devastator" of our society. The
reason why this is not common knowledge in the medical
profession in the US is because the laboratory "normal range" is
way too low. In Japan the range is 2.5 times higher at its low
end - and Japan has very little "Alzheimer's Dementia", and less
depression and bipolar disorders, than we do in the US.
In the
26 years that I have been investigating B12, memory disorders
and depressive/ bipolar illnesses, NO patient who came to me
with a memory problem (early Alzheimer's) has gone on to
Alzheimer's dementia, and I have a near-perfect track record in
helping people overcome depression and bipolar disorders. These
outcomes are largely due to my permanent optimization of every
patient's serum B12 level.
Congratulations
to Ms Sally Pacholok RN on an outstanding recording of most of
the important facts and treatments for this serious condition. I
believe it to be the best book out there for a combination of
both medical and lay readers on this condition.
[To
anyone reading this review: Please do not simply go and buy B12
tablets or lozenges and start taking them, before getting an
accurate serum level measured.]
John V
Dommisse MD, MBChB, FRCP(C)
Tucson,
AZ, USA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Protective
effects
of a vitamin B12 analogue, methylcobalamin, against glutamate
cytotoxicity in cultured cortical neurons
Akaike
A Tamura Y Sato Y Yokota T,
Eur J
Pharmacol (1993 Sep 7) 241(1):1-6
The
effects of methylcobalamin, a vitamin B12 analogue, on
glutamate-induced neurotoxicity were examined using cultured rat
cortical neurons. Cell viability was markedly reduced by a brief
exposure to glutamate followed by incubation with glutamate-free
medium for 1 h. Glutamate cytotoxicity was prevented when the
cultures were maintained in methylcobalamin-containing medium.
Glutamate cytotoxicity was also prevented by chronic exposure to
S-adenosylmethionine, which is formed in the metabolic pathway
of methylcobalamin. Chronic exposure to methylcobalamin and S-
adenosylmethionine also inhibited the cytotoxicity induced by
methyl-D-aspartate or sodium nitroprusside that releases nitric
oxide. In cultures maintained in a standard medium, glutamate
cytotoxicity was not affected by adding methylcobalamin to the
glutamate-containing medium. In contrast, acute exposure to
MK-801, a NMDA receptor antagonist, prevented glutamate
cytotoxicity. These results indicate that chronic exposure to
methylcobalamin protects cortical neurons against NMDA
receptor-mediated glutamate cytotoxicity.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Methylcobalamin
and Diabetic Neuropathy
Clinical usefulness of intrathecal
injection of methylcobalamin in patients with diabetic
neuropathy
Ide H
Fujiya S Asanuma Y Tsuji M Sakai H Agishi Y, Clin Ther (1987)
9(2):183-92
Seven
men and four women with symptomatic diabetic neuropathy were
treated with methylcobalamin (2,500 micrograms in 10 ml of
saline) injected intrathecally. Treatment was begun when
patients had good metabolic control, as determined by
measurements of plasma glucose and hemoglobin, and was repeated
several times with a one-month interval between injections.
Three patients were re-treated one year after the last
intrathecal injection. Symptoms in the legs, such as
paresthesia, burning pains, and heaviness, dramatically
improved. The effect appeared within a few hours to one week and
lasted from several months to four years. The mean peroneal
motor-nerve conduction velocity did not change significantly.
The mean (+/- SD) concentration of methylcobalamin in spinal
fluid was 114 +/- 32 pg/ml before intrathecal injection (n = 5)
and 4,752 +/- 2,504 pg/ml one month after intrathecal
methylcobalamin treatment (n = 11). Methylcobalamin caused no
side effects with respect to subjective symptoms or
characteristics of spinal fluid. These findings suggest that a
high concentration of methylcobalamin in spinal fluid is highly
effective and safe for treating the symptoms of diabetic
neuropathy.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nerve
Regeneration with Methylcobalamin
Ultra-high dose methylcobalamin
promotes nerve regeneration in experimental acrylamide
neuropathy.
Watanabe
T Kaji R Oka N Bara W Kimura J, J Neurol Sci (1994 Apr)
122(2):140-3
Despite
intensive searches for therapeutic agents, few substances have
been convincingly shown to enhance nerve regeneration in
patients with peripheral neuropathies. Recent biochemical
evidence suggests that an ultra-high dose of methylcobalamin
(methyl-B12) may up-regulate gene transcription and thereby
protein synthesis. We examined the effects of ultra-high dose of
methyl-B12 on the rate of nerve regeneration in rats with
acrylamide neuropathy, using the amplitudes of compound muscle
action potentials (CMAPs) after tibial nerve stimulation as an
index of the number of regenerating motor fibers. After
intoxication with acrylamide, all the rats showed equally
decreased CMAP amplitudes. The animals were then divided into 3
groups; rats treated with ultra-high (500 micrograms/kg body
weight, intraperitoneally) and low (50 micrograms/kg) doses of
methyl- B12, and saline-treated control rats. Those treated with
ultra-high dose showed significantly faster CMAP recovery than
saline-treated control rats, whereas the low-dose group showed
no difference from the control. Morphometric analysis revealed a
similar difference in fiber density between these groups.
Ultra-high doses of methyl-B12 may be of clinical use for
patients with peripheral neuropathies.
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Methylcobalamin,
Bell's Palsy
Methylcobalamin treatment of
Bell's Palsy
Jalaludin
MA,
Methods Find Exp Clin Pharmacol (1995 Oct) 17(8):539-44
Bell's
palsy patients were assigned into three treatment groups:
steroid (group 1), methylcobalamin (group 2) and methylcobalamin
+ steroid (group 3). Comparison between the three groups was
based on the number of days needed to attain full recovery,
facial nerve scores, and improvement of concomitant symptoms.
The time required for complete recovery of facial nerve function
was significantly shorter in the methylcobalamin and
methylcobalamin plus steroid groups than in the steroid group.
The facial nerve score after 1-3 weeks of treatment was
significantly more severe (p < 0.001) in the steroid group
compared to the methylcobalamin and methylcobalamin plus steroid
groups. The improvement of concomitant symptoms was better in
the methylcobalamin treated groups than the group treated with
steroid alone.
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Nerve
Terminal Regeneration
Methylcobalamin (methyl-B12)
promotes regeneration of motor nerve terminals degenerating in
anterior gracile muscle of gracile axonal dystrophy (GAD)
mutant mouse.
Yamazaki
K Oda K Endo C Kikuchi T Wakabayashi T, Neurosci Lett (1994 Mar
28) 170(1):195-7
We
examined the effects of methylcobalamin (methyl-B12,
mecobalamin) on degeneration of motor nerve terminals in the
anterior gracile muscle of gracile axonal dystrophy (GAD) mutant
mice. GAD mice received orally methyl-B12 (1 mg/kg body wt/day)
from the 40th day after birth for 25 days. In the distal
endplate zone of the muscle, although most terminals were
degenerated in both the untreated and methyl-B12-treated GAD
mice, sprouts were more frequently observed in the latter. In
the proximal endplate zone, where few degenerated terminals were
seen in both groups of the mice, the perimeter of the terminals
was increased and the area of the terminals was decreased
significantly in the methyl-B12-treated GAD mice. These findings
indicate that methyl-B12 promotes regeneration of degenerating
nerve terminals in GAD mice.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fighting
Neurotoxicity
Protective effects of
methylcobalamin, a vitamin B12 analogue, against
glutamate-induced neurotoxicity in retinal cell culture.
Kikuchi
M Kashii S Honda Y Tamura Y Kaneda K Akaike, Invest Ophthalmol
Vis
Sci
(1997 Apr) 38(5):848-54
Purpose:
To examine the effects of methylcobalamin on glutamate- induced
neurotoxicity in the cultured retinal neurons. Methods: Primary
cultures obtained from the fetal rat retina (gestation days 16
to 19) were used for the experiment. The neurotoxicity was
assessed quantitatively using the trypan blue exclusion method.
Results: Glutamate neurotoxicity was prevented by chronic
exposure to methylcobalamin and S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe),
which is formed in the metabolic pathway of methylcobalamin.
Chronic exposure to methylcobalamin and SAMe also inhibited the
neurotoxicity induced by sodium nitroprusside that release
nitric oxide. By contrast, acute exposure to methylcobalamin did
not protect retinal neurons against glutamate neurotoxicity.
Conclusions: Chronic administration of methylcobalamin protects
cultured retinal neurons against N-methyl-D-
aspartate-receptor-mediated glutamate neurotoxicity, probably by
altering the membrane properties through SAMe-mediated
methylation.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Methyl
Donor Effects
Effect of cobalamin derivatives on
in vitro enzymatic DNA methylation: methylcobalamin can act as
a methyl donor.
Leszkowicz
A Keith G Dirheimer G, Biochemistry (1991 Aug 13) 30(32):8045-51
Methylcytosine
synthesis
in
DNA
involves
the
transfer
of
methyl
groups
from
S-adenosylmethionine
to
the
5'-position
of
cytosine
through
the
action
of
DNA
(cytosine-5)-methyltransferase.
The
rate
of
this
reaction
has
been
found
to
be
enhanced
by
cobalt
ions.
We
therefore
analyzed
the
influence
of
vitamin
B12
and
related
compounds
containing
cobalt
on
DNA
methylation.
Vitamin
B12,
methylcobalamin,
and
coenzyme
B12
(methylcobalamin)
were
found
to
enhance
significantly
the
de
novo
DNA
methylation
in
the
presence
of
S-adenosylmethionine
for
concentrations
up
to
1
microM,
but
at
higher
concentrations
these
compounds
were
found
to
inhibit
DNA
methylation.
Methylcobalamin
behaves
as a competitive inhibitor of the enzymatic methylation reaction
(Ki = 15 microM), the Km for S-adenosylmethionine being 8
microM. In addition, the use of radioactive methylcobalamin
shows that it can be used as a methyl donor in the de novo and
maintenance DNA methylation reactions. Thus, two DNA methylation
pathways could exist: one involving methylation from
S-adenosylmethionine and a second one involving methylation from
methylcobalamin.
Vitamin B12 deficiency
What
is
the definition of "deficient"?
Excerpts from from Wikipedia "Vitamin
B12
deficiency"
Serum B12 levels are often low in B12 deficiency, but if other
features of B12 deficiency are present with normal B12 then the
diagnosis must not be discounted. One possible explanation for
normal B12 levels in B12 deficiency is antibody interference in
people with high titres of intrinsic factor antibody.[24] Some
researchers propose that the current standard norms of vitamin B12
levels are too low.[25] In Japan, the lowest acceptable level for
vitamin B12 in blood has been raised from about 200 pg/ml (145 pM)
to 550 pg/ml (400 pM).[26]
There is
confusion in units of B12 deficiency when given by various labs in
various countries. Where units are presented as pg/liter, or pg/L,
they are likely in error.[citation needed] Where they are
presented as pg/mL or pmol/L, they are likely correct. The ranges
for these two units are similar, since the molecular weight of B12
is approximately 1000, the difference between mL and L. Thus: 550
pg/mL = 400 pmol/L.
Serum
Homocysteine and Methylmalonic acid levels are considered more
reliable indicators of B12 deficiency than the concentration of
B12 in blood, see for example research at the St. Louis
University.[27] The levels of these substances are high in B12
deficiency and can be helpful if the diagnosis is unclear.
Approximately 10% of patients with vitamin B12 levels between
200–400pg/l will have a vitamin B12 deficiency on the basis of
elevated levels of homocysteine and methylmalonic acid.
Masking effect of Folic acid
The National Institutes of Health has found that "Large amounts of
folic acid can mask the damaging effects of vitamin B12 deficiency
by correcting the megaloblastic anemia caused by vitamin B12
deficiency without correcting the neurological damage that also
occurs", there are also indications that "high serum folate levels
might not only mask vitamin B12 deficiency, but could also
exacerbate the anemia and worsen the cognitive symptoms associated
with vitamin B12 deficiency".[41] Due to the fact that in the
United States legislation has required enriched flour to contain
folic acid to reduce cases of fetal neural-tube defects, consumers
may be ingesting more than they realize.[42] To counter the
masking effect of B12 deficiency the NIH recommends "folic acid
intake from fortified food and supplements should not exceed 1,000
mcg daily in healthy adults."[41]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_B12_deficiency
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Known sources:
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Natural sources:
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References:
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