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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
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)
47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serum vitamin
B12
concentrations were measured in 60 patients undergoing repetitive hemodialysis and in undialyzed patients with chronic renal failure. Dialysis patients had significantly lower serum vitamin
B12
levels than the nondialyzed group 321 +/-
SEM
38 pg/ml versus 793 +/- 100), and 19 of 60 dialysis patients had vitamin
B12
Concentrations less than 200 pg/ml. Folic acid concentration was 5 times greater in dialysis than in nondialysis patients, presumably because the latter received daily supplementation with folic acid. Serum vitamin
B12
concentrations fell progressively during the patient's course of dialysis. Neither inadequate dietary intake nor vitamin
B12
malabsorption accounted for the differences in the serum vitamin
B12
concentrations seen in the two groups. Serum vitamin
B12
levels and nerve conduction velocities in 51 dialyzed patients showed a significant correlation. Six dialyzed patients with low serum vitamin
B12
levels and slow nerve conduction velocities showed improvement in nerve conduction (+ 14.6 +/- 3.3 m/sec) following the parenteral use of pharmacological doses of vitamin
B12
. The cause of the low serum vitamin
B12
concentration is not clear, nevertheless, alterations in serum vitamin
B12
seen in some dialysis patients may be a factor in the persistence of abnormal nerve conduction and may be reversed with large doses of parenteral vitamin
B12
.
...
PMID:Vitamin B12 levels and nerve conduction velocities in patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. 18 Jul 88
We studied the rate of disappearance of neutrophil hypersegmentation in 23 patients with megaloblastic anemia during therapy with vitamin
B12
and folic acid. In 14 patients with uncomplicated megaloblastic anemia, the neutrophil lobe average began to fall towards normal 11.4 +/- 0.3 (
SEM
) days after treatment was begun and became normal by 13.9 +/- 0.6 days. In nine patients with associated inflammatory disorders, the lobe average returned to normal more rapidly. In six initially neutropenic patients, a five-fold increase in total granulocyte count occurred by the eighth day and a seven-fold increment in the total number of circulating hypersegmented neutrophils. Granulocyte folate concentrations in five folate-deficient patients rose to normal levels within 4 to 7 days of starting therapy. Hypersegmentation thus persists for many days after correction of neutropenia and restoration of normal granulocyte folate levels have occurred. We conclude that cobalamin and folate are needed at two different steps in granulopoiesis.
...
PMID:Persistence of neutrophil hypersegmentation during recovery from megaloblastic granulopoiesis. 43 75
Three urinary excretion tests of vitamin
B12
absorption were done in 12 patients with classic pernicious anemia. The 24-hour urinary excretion of radioactivity was 2.1% +/- 0.7% (mean +/-
SEM
) of the ingested dose of cyanocobalamin-57 Co. When cyanocobalamin-57 Co was mixed with hog intrinsic factor in water, excretion increased to 15.6% +/- 1.6%. When cyanocobalamin-57 Co and intrinsic factor were given in two separate capsules, which is now a frequent practice, excretion was 9.5% +/- 2.2%. In 6 patients, use of the results obtained with capsules could have led to an incorrect diagnosis. When cyanocobalamin-57 Co and intrinsic factor are given in separate capsules, binding of radioactive vitamin to intrinsic factor may be incomplete due to inadequate mixing in the stomach or to binding of intrinsic factor to blocking antibody in the gastric juice. The classic technique in which intrinsic factor and cyanocobalamin-57 Co are mixed in water before administration should be used.
...
PMID:Spurious Schilling test results obtained with intrinsic factor enclosed in capsules. 120 May 29
A simple, precise method has been developed for assessing neutrophil secretory responses (release of vitamin
B12
binding protein from specific granules) to challenge of aliquots of whole blood with the bacterial chemotactic peptide N-formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP). Dose-response studies performed on blood from normal healthy volunteers showed higher maximal secretory responses in males than females (33.3 +/-
SEM
2.2 vs. 27.4 +/- 2.5, P less than .005) a left shift in dose-response curves after feeding compared to fasting (P less than .005), spontaneous up-regulation of responses in blood incubated at 37 degrees C for 1 h, and marked upregulation in response to preincubation with endotoxin. This whole blood challenge method may be used to study neutrophil responses in groups of individuals or patients without the confounding effects of changes in cell responses resulting from cell isolation procedures. The method may also be used as a bioassay for neutrophil-activating factors.
...
PMID:Assessment of neutrophil leukocyte secretory response to fMLP in whole blood in vitro. 150 68
The role of bacteria in the bioavailability of protein-bound vitamin
B12
was examined in eight elderly subjects who had atrophic gastritis and in eight normal controls. On separate days and in random order, vitamin
B12
absorption tests were performed using either radiolabeled crystalline or protein-bound vitamin
B12
. At the same time, bacterial samples were collected from the upper gastrointestinal tract. The tests and gastrointestinal aspirates were performed before and during tetracycline therapy. Crystalline vitamin
B12
was absorbed to the same extent in the two study groups. Atrophic gastritis subjects absorbed significantly less protein-bound vitamin
B12
than normal controls (mean +/-
SEM
, 0.7% +/- 0.2% vs. 1.9% +/- 0.5%, respectively). However, protein-bound vitamin
B12
absorption in these subjects normalized after antibiotic therapy. These results suggest that the small amounts of vitamin
B12
released from the protein binders is readily absorbed (as shown in vitro) and/or metabolized by bacteria.
...
PMID:Reversal of protein-bound vitamin B12 malabsorption with antibiotics in atrophic gastritis. 188 97
Plasma levels of vitamins were determined in eight patients who were nourished with long-term enteral feeding using commercial formulas. The type and quantity of the formula were individually tailored to the patients' needs. Caloric intake (mean +/-
SEM
) amounted to 1564 +/- 97 kcal/day. Vitamins intake from the formulas, expressed as percent of Recommended Daily Allowances (RDA), was as follows: pantothenic acid, 222 +/- 44%; vitamin
B12
, 206 +/- 34%; vitamin C, 376 +/- 51%; thiamine, 207 +/- 34%; niacin, 207 +/- 34%; riboflavin, 207 +/- 34%; pyridoxine, 222 +/- 17%; biotin, 113 +/- 13%; vitamin A, 93 +/- 4%; and folic acid, 104 +/- 14%. Plasma levels of thiamine, riboflavin, pyridoxine, pantothenic acid, folic acid, and vitamin
B12
were within normal limits in all patients. Two patients had lower than normal plasma levels of nicotinic acid despite the high intake. Plasma biotin levels were above normal in all patients, with a mean of 931 +/- 140 pg/ml (N: 200-500 pg/ml). Ascorbic acid levels were within or above normal, but no correlation with intake was found. Carotene levels were measured in five patients and found to be below the lower limit of normal, a reflection of lack of intake from the enteral formulas. The plasma vitamin A levels were normal in all patients. It is concluded that feeding with commercial enteral formulas results in normal plasma levels of vitamins in patients maintained on these formulas for over 6 months. The excessive amounts of vitamins in the formulas do not result in elevated plasma levels, except for Biotin.
...
PMID:Vitamin plasma levels in long-term enteral feeding patients. 251 94
Homocysteine is an amino acid considered to cause vascular injury, arteriosclerosis, and thromboembolism. Total plasma homocysteine (free and protein-bound) was found to be twice as high in asymptomatic vitamin
B12
-deficient subjects (23.8 +/- 3.8 mumol/L, means +/-
SEM
, n = 20) as in controls (11.5 +/- 0.9 mumol/L, P less than .0001, n = 21), and higher than in heterozygotes for homocystinuria due to cystathionine beta-synthase deficiency (13.8 +/- 1.6 mumol/L, P less than .01, n = 14), who were recently shown to be much more common among patients with premature vascular disease than expected. Eight (40%) vitamin
B12
-deficient and two (14%) heterozygote subjects had significant homocysteinemia (greater than mean +2 SD for controls). After administration of hydroxycobalamin to vitamin
B12
-deficient subjects, homocysteine levels decreased to normal (-49%, 12.2 +/- 1.5 mumol/L, P less than .0001, n = 20). Thus, if homocysteine does cause vascular injury, theoretically vitamin
B12
-deficiency might be associated with an increased frequency of vascular disease.
...
PMID:Higher total plasma homocysteine in vitamin B12 deficiency than in heterozygosity for homocystinuria due to cystathionine beta-synthase deficiency. 334 5
Among 37 patients who underwent total gastrectomy for nonmalignant disease, operative mortality was 4 per cent after 27 elective operations and 10 per cent after 10 emergency operations. Three other patients died 1 to 6 months after operation. Major postoperative complications occurred in 24 per cent. Long-term follow-up of 26 patients (81 per cent of survivors) after a mean +/-
SEM
of 8.4 +/- 1.1 years showed that 73 per cent of patients had no or only occasional, easily controlled, mild abdominal symptoms and good enough health to enable them to work or carry out normal activities for their age. The patients lost a mean of 15 per cent of their body weight, however, and about one third of them had weakness and diarrhea. A quarter of them had anemia despite iron and vitamin
B12
therapy. Our conclusion was that total gastrectomy is a reasonable operation for benign diseases. Nonetheless, in view of the substantial postoperative mortality and morbidity, the operation should be used only when less extensive operations will not suffice.
...
PMID:Total gastrectomy for benign disease. 358 2
A totally implanted, intermittently inflatable, silicone rubber cuff, reservoir, and control mechanism were evaluated for use as an artificial sphincter in 18 female beagle dogs that had undergone ileostomy. The dogs were divided into daily 8-hour occlusion, test, and always open, control, groups. Animals were evaluated daily for continence and peristomal irritation. Quantitative aerobic and anaerobic cultures, measurements of ileal accommodation, net fluxes of H2O, Na, K, and taurocholate, fecal fat loss, and urinary excretion of oral 58Co X
B12
plus mucosal suction biopsies were done at 4, 12, 24, and 36 weeks. Eight hours of daily occlusion caused dependable continence without causing damage to the underlying or upstream mucosa and significantly reduced the incidence of peristomal erosion (6.8 +/- 0.8 days/dog-days X 100 versus 50.7 +/- 7 days/dog-days X 100 [+/-
SEM
] [p less than 0.001]). Occlusion also promoted anaerobic bacterial growth (9.00 +/- 0.41 logs versus 6.70 +/- 0.58 logs [p less than 0.001]). Test animals showed significant capacitance accommodation of the terminal ileum without incurring defects in ileal absorptive or secretory function. Gangrenous herniation of small bowel through an aperture formed by an intestinal loop adhering to the capsule surrounding the cuff, device failure, and fibrotic obstruction occurred sporadically as late as 29 weeks after implantation. The artifical sphincter was effective and was physiologically well tolerated, but its specific liabilities require further address.
...
PMID:Assessment of an implantable ileostomy sphincter. 401 9
Activities of the neutrophil granule-associated proteins beta-glucuronidase, lysozyme and vitamin
B12
binding protein were measured, serially, in the cells and serum of 10 patients undergoing total abdominal hysterectomy. The neutrophil leucocytosis which followed total abdominal hysterectomy was accompanied by a fall in the intraneutrophilic activities of all three granule-associated proteins. Intraneutrophilic lysozyme activity and intraneutrophilic vitamin
B12
binding capacity were maximally reduced within 4 h of surgery and fell to 62 +/- 13% (mean +/-
SEM
) and 63 +/- 9% of their preoperative levels, respectively. This contrasted with the activity of intraneutrophilic beta-glucuronidase which was not maximally reduced until 24 h post-surgery when a fall to 80 +/- 6% of the preoperative level was observed. By the fifth postoperative day activities of the three intraneutrophilic granule proteins were increasing and approaching those observed preoperatively. Serum lysozyme and plasma unsaturated vitamin
B12
binding capacity (UBBC) rose steadily following surgery and were significantly elevated by the fifth postoperative day. It is suggested that activation and in vivo degranulation of circulating neutrophils may be responsible for these changes in activity of neutrophil granule proteins following surgery.
...
PMID:The effects of surgery on the activity of neutrophil granule proteins. 684 26
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