MP322 - VITAMIN DEFICIENCIES Flashcards
vitamins
organic compounds that are required in small quantities for a variety of biochemical functions
water-soluble vitamins
B12
B9
C (Ascorbic acid)
fat-soluble vitamins
A (retinol)
D (cholecalciferol)
E (tocopherol)
K
sources of vitamin B12 (cobalamin)
- synthesised solely by microorganisms
- source is food of animal origin
- strict vegetarians/vegans at risk of developing B12 deficincy
Passive absorption of vitamin B12
through buccal, duodenal and ileal mucosa
rapid but inefficient
active transport absorption of vitamin B12
- normal physiological mechanism
- occurs through ileum
- mediated by gastric intrinsic factor
plasma transport of vit B12 and cellular uptake
- B12 is transported in the plasma bound to transcobalamin I, II or III
- internalisation occurs in complex with transcobalamin receptor (CD320) via endocytosis
- the transcobalamin is degraded
- excess vitamin B12 sent to liver for storage
role of intrinsic factor in absorption
- produced in parietal cells and its secretion parallels that of acid
- in absence of intrinsic factor inadequate amounts of B12 are absorbed
- results in megaloblastic anaemia
when absence of intrinsic factor = pernicious anaemia
pernicious anaemia
autoimmune atrophic gastritis
- destruction of gastric parietal cells and lack of intrinsic factor
- immune response directed against H+/K+ ATPase
- causes achlorhydria (production of gastric acid low/absent)
- can be caused by antibodies directed against intrinsic factor
aetiology of B12 deficiency
- inadequate dietary intake
- loss of gastric parietal cells or intrinsic factor
- functionally abnormal intrinsic factor
- bacterial overgrowth in intestine
- disorders of ileal mucosa
- disorders of plasma transport
- dysfunctional uptake and use of B12 by cells
treatment of B12 deficiency
oral - cyanocobalamin
parenteral - hydroxycobalamin
must be parenteral in pernicious anaemia or total gastrectomy
lifelong treatment
sources of vitamin B9 (folate, folic acid)
- dark green veg and dried legumes
- fruit and fruit juices
- meat, seafood, poultry and eggs
- fortified cereals and bread
folic acid daily requirements
200 MICROGRAMS/DAY
400 MICROGRAMS/DAY SUPPLEMENT IN PREGNANCY
plasma transport of folate and cellular uptake
- most folate transported as mono-glutamyl derivative
- most folate circulates free in the blood (or bound to albumin)
- cellular uptake by 3 mechanisms (PCFT, RFC, and folate receptor)
- intracellular folates exist primarily as polyglutamate conjugates
cellular requirements for folate
folate is crucial for the transfer of one-carbon units to amino acids, nucleotides, and other biomolecues