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A physiological dose of oral vitamin B-12 improves hematological, biochemical-metabolic indicies and peripheral nerve function in B-12 deficient Indian adolescent women.

A physiological dose of oral vitamin B-12 improves hematological, biochemical-metabolic indicies and peripheral nerve function in B-12 deficient Indian adolescent women.
A physiological dose of oral vitamin B-12 improves hematological, biochemical-metabolic indicies and peripheral nerve function in B-12 deficient Indian adolescent women.
Background Vitamin B-12 deficiency is often considered synonymous with pernicious anemia, a rare condition in which severe malabsorption of the vitamin requires high-dose parenteral treatment. In developing countries such as India, inadequate dietary intake of B-12 due to socio-cultural factors leads to widely prevalent asymptomatic low B-12 status. In this scenario, lower doses of oral B-12 may be effective, safer and more affordable. Objective To examine the effects of oral B-12 treatment at physiological doses on hematological and biochemical indices and peripheral nerve function in B-12 deficient rural Indian adolescent women. Methods Thirty-nine women with B-12 deficiency who were excluded from a community based B-12 supplementation trial (Pune Rural Intervention in Young Adolescents (PRIYA)) received oral B-12 2μg/day, either alone (n = 19) or with multiple micronutrients (UNIMAPP formula + 20gm milk powder, n = 20) for 11 months. Hematological indices, nutrients (B-12, folate), metabolites (homocysteine) and peripheral nerve function (SUDOSCAN, Impetomedical, Paris and sensory nerve conduction velocity (NCV) of median and sural nerves) were assessed at baseline and after 11 months of B-12 treatment. Results Results were similar in the two treatment allocation groups, which were therefore combined. At baseline, all women had B-12 concentration <100pmol/L, 79% were anemic and 33% had macrocytosis, but none had neuropathy. After 11 months of treatment, B-12 levels increased, while folate did not change. The prevalence of anemia fell to 59% and mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and plasma homocysteine concentrations decreased. Sudomotor nerve function in the feet improved by an average of 14.7%, and sensory conduction velocity in median and sural nerves increased by 16.2% and 29.4% respectively. Conclusion We document clinically beneficial effects of supplementation with a physiological dose of oral B-12 in asymptomatic rural Indian adolescent women with very low B-12 status. These findings support a public health approach to tackle the widely prevalent low B-12 status in young Indians.
1932-6203
Yajnik, Chittaranjan S.
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Behere, Rishikesh V.
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Bhat, Dattatray S.
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Memane, Nilam
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Raut, Deepa
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Ladkat, Rasika
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Yajnik, Pallavi
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Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
ea8fa175-5f63-4c5b-a9b2-e6861a59d89e
Fall, Caroline
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Yajnik, Chittaranjan S.
f5777038-bba7-49bd-80b9-be4e586eecf4
Behere, Rishikesh V.
63270b57-6a5b-4ada-991b-13cb42994f4f
Bhat, Dattatray S.
b3b571d2-72af-4d0f-8cfd-5ec82733147f
Memane, Nilam
eb44304e-26ab-41e1-b23b-909b3d0aee19
Raut, Deepa
37c2d541-52ad-40a9-9231-2fa088eae84b
Ladkat, Rasika
c41271d0-6420-4614-82dd-d263d4771a09
Yajnik, Pallavi
8e0944e6-3539-458e-9947-586745abe2ff
Kumaran, Kalyanaraman
ea8fa175-5f63-4c5b-a9b2-e6861a59d89e
Fall, Caroline
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18

Yajnik, Chittaranjan S., Behere, Rishikesh V., Bhat, Dattatray S., Memane, Nilam, Raut, Deepa, Ladkat, Rasika, Yajnik, Pallavi, Kumaran, Kalyanaraman and Fall, Caroline (2019) A physiological dose of oral vitamin B-12 improves hematological, biochemical-metabolic indicies and peripheral nerve function in B-12 deficient Indian adolescent women. PLoS ONE, 14 (10), [e0223000]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0223000).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background Vitamin B-12 deficiency is often considered synonymous with pernicious anemia, a rare condition in which severe malabsorption of the vitamin requires high-dose parenteral treatment. In developing countries such as India, inadequate dietary intake of B-12 due to socio-cultural factors leads to widely prevalent asymptomatic low B-12 status. In this scenario, lower doses of oral B-12 may be effective, safer and more affordable. Objective To examine the effects of oral B-12 treatment at physiological doses on hematological and biochemical indices and peripheral nerve function in B-12 deficient rural Indian adolescent women. Methods Thirty-nine women with B-12 deficiency who were excluded from a community based B-12 supplementation trial (Pune Rural Intervention in Young Adolescents (PRIYA)) received oral B-12 2μg/day, either alone (n = 19) or with multiple micronutrients (UNIMAPP formula + 20gm milk powder, n = 20) for 11 months. Hematological indices, nutrients (B-12, folate), metabolites (homocysteine) and peripheral nerve function (SUDOSCAN, Impetomedical, Paris and sensory nerve conduction velocity (NCV) of median and sural nerves) were assessed at baseline and after 11 months of B-12 treatment. Results Results were similar in the two treatment allocation groups, which were therefore combined. At baseline, all women had B-12 concentration <100pmol/L, 79% were anemic and 33% had macrocytosis, but none had neuropathy. After 11 months of treatment, B-12 levels increased, while folate did not change. The prevalence of anemia fell to 59% and mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and plasma homocysteine concentrations decreased. Sudomotor nerve function in the feet improved by an average of 14.7%, and sensory conduction velocity in median and sural nerves increased by 16.2% and 29.4% respectively. Conclusion We document clinically beneficial effects of supplementation with a physiological dose of oral B-12 in asymptomatic rural Indian adolescent women with very low B-12 status. These findings support a public health approach to tackle the widely prevalent low B-12 status in young Indians.

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 September 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 October 2019

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Local EPrints ID: 435072
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/435072
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 1e8373a9-770b-47a4-9057-93041b32e894
ORCID for Caroline Fall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4402-5552

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Date deposited: 22 Oct 2019 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:36

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Contributors

Author: Chittaranjan S. Yajnik
Author: Rishikesh V. Behere
Author: Dattatray S. Bhat
Author: Nilam Memane
Author: Deepa Raut
Author: Rasika Ladkat
Author: Pallavi Yajnik
Author: Kalyanaraman Kumaran
Author: Caroline Fall ORCID iD

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