Vitamin B12 and Folate Deficiency Flashcards
1
Q
What are the causes/risk factors of vitamin b12 deficiency?
A
- age >65 years
- history of gastric surgery (gastrectomy, or bypass for obesity)
- vegan and vegetarian diet
- chronic gastrointestinal illnesses (e.g., Crohn’s disease or coeliac disease)
- use of known causative medications (proton-pump inhibitors, H2 receptor antagonists, metformin, anticonvulsants)
2
Q
What are the causes/risk factors of folate deficiency?
A
- low dietary folate intake
- age >65 years
- alcoholism
- pregnancy or lactation; prematurity
- intestinal malabsorption disorders
- use of trimethoprim, methotrexate, anticonvulsants, sulfasalazine, or pyrimethamine
- infantile intake of goats’ milk; and congenital defects in folate absorption and metabolism
3
Q
What are the signs and symptoms of vitamin b12 deficiency?
A
- paraesthesias
- chronic gastrointestinal disease (e.g., Crohn’s disease or coeliac disease)
- medicine (proton-pump inhibitors, H2 receptor antagonists, metformin, anticonvulsants)
- ataxia
- decreased vibration sense
- positive Romberg’s test
- pallor
- petechiae
- glossitis
- angular cheilitis
- cognitive impairment
4
Q
What are the signs and symptoms of folate deficiency?
A
- prolonged diarrhoea
- headache
- loss of appetite and weight loss
- fatigue
- shortness of breath
- dizziness
- pallor
- tachycardia
- tachypnoea
- heart murmur
- signs of heart failure
- signs of chronic alcohol abuse
- signs of haemolytic anaemia
- signs of exfoliative dermatitis
- painful swallowing
- petechiae
- glossitis
- angular stomatitis
- neurological deficits in children
5
Q
What investigations are carried out for vitamin b12 deficiency?
A
- FBC - elevated MCV, low haematocrit
- peripheral blood smear - megalocytes, hypersegmented polymorphonucleated cells
- serum vitamin B12
- reticulocyte count - low corrected reticulocyte index
- methylmalonic acid (MMA) - elevated
- homocysteine - elevated
- holotranscobalamin
- intrinsic factor (IF) antibody - positive if PA is the cause
- antiparietal cell (APC) antibody - positive result may suggest PA
- serum gastrin (fasting) - elevated if pernicious anaemia is the cause
- Schilling test
6
Q
What investigations are carried out for folate deficiency?
A
- peripheral blood smear - macrocytosis, anisocytosis, poikilocytosis, hypersegmented neutrophils
- FBC - low haemoglobin, elevated MCV and MCH; increased MCV and MCH may be absent or less than expected in combined folate and iron deficiency; thrombocytopenia, neutropenia
- reticulocyte count - low corrected reticulocyte count
- serum folate - low
- RBC folate - low
- serum vitamin B12 - normal
- serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) - elevated
- serum unconjugated bilirubin - elevated
- serum iron panel - elevated serum iron, ferritin, transferrin
- plasma or serum methylmalonic acid - normal
- plasma homocysteine - elevated
- bone marrow aspirate/biopsy - megaloblastic changes, erythroid hyperplasia, abnormal nuclear appearance