The relationship between serum cobalamin concentration and mean red cell volume at varying concentrations of serum folate
- 1 October 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Clinical and Laboratory Haematology
- Vol. 26 (5) , 323-325
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2257.2004.00631.x
Abstract
There is concern that exposure of patients to folic acid may prevent the development of the macrocytosis of cobalamin deficiency and thus delay the detection of the neurological complications. We examined the relationship between low cobalamin levels and mean cell volume (MCV) at different serum folate concentrations in 63,472 blood samples tested in a community pathology laboratory over 2 years. We found no evidence that high serum folate levels masked the macrocytosis of cobalamin deficiency in this population with similar increases in MCV regardless of whether the serum folate was low, normal or high. Macrocytosis appears to retain its value as a marker of cobalamin deficiency in people with serum folate concentrations above the population average.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unmetabolized folic acid in serum: acute studies in subjects consuming fortified food and supplementsThe American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1997
- The Significance of Subnormal Serum Vitamin B12 Concentration in Older People: A Case Control StudyJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1996
- Low Serum B12 Levels in a Hematologically Normal Elderly SubpopulationJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1987
- Deranged DNA Synthesis by Bone Marrow from Vitamin B12‐Deficient Humans*British Journal of Haematology, 1968
- THE DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESSION OF SUBACUTE COMBINED DEGENERATION OF THE SPINAL CORD IN PATIENTS WITH PERNICIOUS ANEMIA TREATED WITH SYNTHETIC PTEROYLGLUTAMIC (FOLIC) ACIDBlood, 1948
- FOLIC ACID IN PERNICIOUS ANEMIAJAMA, 1947