Low Serum Cobalamin Levels in Primary Degenerative Dementia
- 1 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 147 (3) , 429-431
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1987.00370030033007
Abstract
• Serum cobalamin (vitamin B12) levels were analyzed retrospectively in 17 patients with primary degenerative dementia and 11 with specific demonstrable causes of dementia (secondary dementia). The prevalence of low cobalamin levels was significantly increased in primary dementia (29% vs 0% in secondary dementia). Because typical findings of deficiency often seemed absent, we prospectively studied two other patients with primary dementia and low cobalamin levels. Neither of these two had megaloblastic anemia; one had a normal Schilling test while the other's was borderline. Despite this absence of the expected findings, the deoxyuridine suppression test gave biochemical evidence of cobalamin deficiency in both cases. Our survey of 28 patients thus established that low serum cobalamin levels are frequent in primary dementia. Our findings in the two prospectively studied cases (as well as in some of the patients in the survey) indicate that these levels are associated in at least some cases with an atypical deficiency state rather than with disorders such as pernicious anemia. Such atypical deficiency states cannot be identified by classic hematological criteria or by the Schilling test. (Arch Intern Med1987;147:429-431)This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- LOW SERUM VITAMIN B12 IN ALZHEIMER-TYPE DEMENTIAAge and Ageing, 1984
- The Deoxyuridine Suppression TestCRC Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences, 1984
- The Vitamin B12 Concentrations of Serum and Urine of Normals and of Patients with Megaloblastic Anaemias and Other DiseasesJournal of Clinical Pathology, 1952