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![]() . Vitamin B12 History More Symptoms & Illustrations Learn about Methylcobalamin, the active form of B12 Should you take Methylcobalamin? If you are under stress chances are you need it and already show symptoms of low B12. Read the research below. . Like a healthy plant, your fingernails grow. And, just as leaves show the health of a plant, your fingernails reveal your health and inner condition. (Hippocrates, 400 B.C.E.) Every six months you have a new fingernail, from cuticle to tip. The rate of growth is about an eighth inch a month. Good vitamin B12 levels give you white moons on all your fingers; the thumbs' are the last to go. (Tessa Jupp, R.N., active in the Post-Polio Network, Dec. 2001) If your moons have disappeared, you may have been short of vitamin B12 for a long time. If so, you may be noticing symptoms of B12 Malabsorption Illness: tingling hands and feet numbness memory problems feeling exhausted depression sensitivity to noise a lot of brown spots bleeding gums burning sensation (possibly on thighs) legs hurt and "jump" at night pain, including bone pain in legs balance and gait problems heavy menstrual bleeding; nose bleeds diarrhea Before your moons disappear, ridges develop on your nails. These can be faint, to very visible ridges like wax drippings on a Chianti bottle, but finer. Lines on top of lines look like hogback hills. To see them clearly, use a magnifying glass or reading glasses. If you have faint lines, no more noticeable than the tassels on the wheat in the image to the left, then run through the barbed issues above, looking for ones that apply to you. If three or four do, then be warned that the others may be only a few years away. If, that is, you do nothing. Blue skin under your fingernails indicates that you may be short of red blood cells and by extension, the oxygen they carry. Red blood cells are supposed to divide. For more information, click on the healthy splat... What your fingernails may be telling you is that your nerves are being affected by a B12 malabsorption illness. Research follows the navigation bar below. . In 33% of cases, tingling and numbness are the first symptoms. New Evidence Research Excerpts More symptoms Foods Containing B12 Articles How I Know It's True Serrapeptase (for pain) "I lost memory and processing speed from undiagnosed, untreated low B12. I wish someone had warned me. That's why I did this web site." Karen Marie Kline I've just lost my condo. The courts have let me down. But curiously, if they had not, I would not have made these pages. Research Excerpts Regarding Vitamin B12 "Depression seems characteristic of most vitamin B deficiencies." British Journal of Psychiatry. June 1990. "Pernicious anemia results from a deficiency of cobalamin, or vitamin B12. The neurological symptoms associated with cobalamin deficiency were identified more than 100 years ago. Today, cobalamin deficiency is more likely to be recognized in its earlier stages, and the associated neurological symptoms are more easily reversed by vitamin B12 treatment." Neurologic aspects of cobalamin deficiency, Medicine, July 1991, research by: Heaton, Savage, Brust, Garrett, Lindenbaum. "Of 369 patients with documented cobalamin deficiency seen over a 17-year period, 189 developed neurological symptoms. In 114 cases, the neurological symptoms were the first indications of the vitamin deficiency. The most common initial complaint was paresthesia, or abnormal sensation, which affected more than 70 percent of the patients with neurological symptoms. These abnormal sensations took the form of a 'pins and needles' feeling, numbness, or tingling. In 10 cases, these feelings were strong enough to be considered disabling by the patient. In 122 episodes of deficiency, neurological abnormalities were found at the time of initial diagnosis. The most common was reduced sensitivity to vibration, which was observed in 107 episodes. Proprioception, the awareness of position and movements of the body, was impaired or absent in the toes or ankles in 72 episodes." Ibid. "The majority of cases improved with treatment; moderate or severe neurologic disability was known to persist in only 6.3 percent of the patients who received adequate follow-up. Eleven of the 18 patients with mental impairment had a complete response to vitamin B12 therapy." Ibid. "The extent of nervous system dysfunction was clearly related to the duration of neurologic symptoms before treatment." Ibid. "In the 10 episodes in which the pretreatment severity score was 20 or greater a complete response was seen in only 2 and residual neurologic dysfunction was observed in all of the 8 episodes in which the severity score was more than 23 before therapy." Ibid. "Duration of symptoms correlated quantitatively with post-treatment severity." Ibid. "When mental impairment occurred, however, it was frequently the most disabling and dominant neurologic abnormality." Ibid. "A striking feature of our patients was the high degree of responsiveness to Cbl [cobalamin] therapy." Ibid. "The severity score was reduced by 50% or greater after treatment in 91% of the episodes. Residual long-term moderate or severe neurologic disability was noted following only 7 (6.3%) episodes." Ibid. "Vitamin B12 deficiency causes abnormalities in both the blood and in neurological function. In many patients, the neurological abnormalities resulting from vitamin B12 deficiency become apparent before any blood abnormalities develop. These neurological abnormalities may cover a wide spectrum, ranging from abnormal sensations and impairment of vibration sensitivity to conditions as severe as abnormal gait and even dementia." Cerebrospinal fluid methylmalonic acid levels in normal subjects and patients with cobalamin deficiency, by Stabler, Allen, Barrett, Savage, Lindenbaum. Neurology. Oct. 1991. "Among patients with cobalamin deficiency, the blood level of methylmalonic acid was about eight times greater than among controls. However, in the cerebrospinal fluid, the level of methylmalonic acid was, on the average, 600 times greater than among control patients." Ibid. "Cobalamin deficiency worsens with increasing age and has been implicated in declining cognitive functions in elderly persons. Early diagnosis and treatment of cobalamin deficiency are thus important in preventing or slowing down neuropsychiatric disorders in the elderly." Review: cobalamin deficiency and mental impairment in elderly people, Age and Ageing, Nov. 1995. "Cobalamin deficiency increases with advancing age and is found in 3% to 42% of persons aged 65 and over." Ibid. "It has been shown that nearly 50% of patients with low serum cobalamin and a normal Schilling test are unable to absorb protein-bound cobalamin as opposed to the free cobalamin used in the Schilling test." Ibid. "Another manifestation of cobalamin deficiency is altered mental status, which consists of impairment of attention span, memory abstraction, or other intellectual functions with or without abnormalities of behaviour, mood, affect, or logical thought. Neuropsychiatric symptoms may be the initial, or the only, manifestations of cobalamin deficiency." Ibid. "Cobalamin deficiency may result in a variety of mental symptoms, such as organic psychosis, dementia paranoia, memory impairment, mania, slow mentation, hallucinations, and depression." Ibid. "A finding of low serum cobalamin levels in Alzheimer's disease and multi-infarct dementia, but not in other forms of dementia or cognitive impairment, would suggest that cobalamin deficiency may cause specific types of dementia and is not the result of dementia with consequently insufficient dietary intake of cobalamin." Ibid. "In a recent study 18 subjects with low serum cobalamin and evidence of cognitive dysfunction were investigated. Only patients who had symptoms for less than 1 year showed improvement after therapy. The best clinical responders had been symptomatic for less than 6 months." Ibid. "These investigations indicate that the duration of the cobalamin deficiency plays an essential role in the degree of improvement of neuropsychiatric symptoms after treatment." Ibid. "This is important, because cobalamin deficiency may have to be acknowledged as a significant cause of neuropsychiatric disorders in elderly people. Early treatment may prevent irreversibility of the neuropsychological features and organic lesions of the brain related to the deficiency." Ibid. "Classical disorders such as pernicious anemia are the cause of this deficiency in only a small proportion of the elderly. A more frequent problem is food-cobalamin malabsorption which usually arises from atrophic gastritis and hypochlorhydria but other mechanisms seem to be involved in some patients." Cobalamin, the stomach, and ageing. American Journal of Clinial Nutrition. Oct. 1997. "The partial nature of this form of malabsorption produces a more slowly progressive depletion of cobalamin than does the more complete malabsorption engendered by disruption of intrinsic factor-mediated absorption. The slower progression of depletion probably explains why mild, preclinical deficiency is associated with food-cobalamin malabsorption more often than with pernicious anemia." Ibid. "Attention has shifted recently to the challenge of milder cobalamin deficiency states in which signs such as megaloblastic anemia are not apparent. This is a much more common problem than classical deficiency. This entity has emerged largely because of the application of sensitive metabolic tests to patients." Mild cobalamin deficiency. The Western Journal of Medicine. June 1998. "An examination of the relationship of plasma cobalamin (vitmin B(12)) level to overall psychological distress, specific mood states, and major depressive disorder was conducted in 159 bereaved men... findings suggest that cobalamin level may be physiologically related to depressed and anxious mood level, as well as to syndromal depression." Cobalamin level is related to self-reported and clinically rated mood and to syndromal..." Health Source - Consumer Edition, 2000. "In community-dwelling older women, metabolically significant vitamin B(sub 12) deficiency is associated with a twofold risk of severe depression." Vitamin B12 deficiency and depression in physically disabled older women: epidemiologic evidence from the Women's Health and Aging Study. American Journal of Psychiatry. May 2000. (Authors include Stabler) "Evidence for vitamin [B.sub. 12] deficiency usually involves combinations of low serum vitamin [B.sub.12] levels, clinical and metabolic abnormalities, and therapeutic response. Identification of the underlying cause is important in the diagnosis of vitamin [B.sub. 12] deficiency that is usually attributed to malabsorption. Helicobacter pylori is one of the most common causes of peptic ulcer disease worldwide and a major cause of chronic superficial gastritis leading to atrophy of gastric glands. It is suggested that there maybe a causal relationship between H pylori and food cobalamin malabsorption." Helicobacter pylori--Is It a Novel Causative Agent in Vitamin [B.sub.12] Deficiency? Archives of Internal Medicine. May 2000. "Food cobalamin is released as a stable complex with gastric R binder and its absorption depends on the initial release from the binders in food. Food-cobalamin malabsorption is marked by the inability to release cobalamin from food. Therefore, cobalamin cannot be taken up by intrinsic factor for absorption. Release of cobalamin from food requires acid and pepsin, and most food-cobalamin malabsorptive states can be traced to gastric defects. However, other mechanisms may also play a role." Ibid. "It has been proposed that pernicious anemia may represent the final phase of a process that begins with H pylori--associated gastritis and evolves through progressive levels of atrophy until parietal cell mass is entirely lost." Ibid. "In a retrospective study that was conducted in 1994 and 1995, we demonstrated that a majority (55%) of cases of cyanocobalamin (vitamin [B.sub.12]) deficiency were related to the inability to release cobalamin from food and that pernicious anemia was a rare condition (17%). In a second retrospective study that was conducted between 1995 and 1998, we confirmed that food cobalamin malabsorption was emerging as a major cause of vitamin [B.sub.12] deficiency. We found that 68 patients (60%) had a vitamin [B.sub.12] deficiency caused by food cobalamin malabsorption and 7 subjects (6%) had pernicious anemia." Food Cobalamin Malabsorption: A Usual Cause of Vitamin [B.sub.12] Deficiency. Archives of Internal Medicine. July 2000. "There is little reason to treat food cobalamin malabsorption differently than pernicious anemia." Ibid. "The objective of this study was to investigate whether cognitive functioning is affected in adolescents (aged 10-16 y) with marginal cobalamin status as a result of being fed a macrobiotic diet up to an average age of 6 y... Conclusion: Our data suggest that cobalamin deficiency, in the absence of hematologic signs, may lead to impaired cognitive performance in adolescents." American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Sept. 2000. "Patients with mild-moderate dementia and elevated plasma homocysteine levels improved clinically with increased test scores after vitamin substitution." Improvement of cognitive functions after cobalamin/folate supplementation in elderly patients with dementia and elevated plasma homocysteine. Alternative Medicine Review. Oct. 2001. "Mild cobalamin (Cbl) deficiency is frequently found in older persons and is associated with cognitive and cerebral abnormalities... Conclusion. Electrographic signs of improved cerebral function and improved cognitive function were found after Cbl supplementation in older subjects with low plasma Cbl concentrations who were free of significant cognitive impairment. These improvements were related to a reduction of plasma tHcy concentration." Cobalamin supplementation improves cognitive and cerebral function in older, cobalamin-deficient persons. The Journals of Gerontology, Series A. Dec. 2001. "Megalin has previously been shown to bind and mediate endocytosis of transcobalamin (TC)-[B.sub.12]. However, the physiological significance of this has not been established, and other TC-[B.sub.12] binding proteins have been suggested to mediate renal uptake of this vitamin complex. The present study demonstrates by the use of megalin-deficient mice that megalin is, in fact, essential for the normal renal reabsorption of TC-vitamin [B.sub.12] and for renal accumulation of this highly conserved vitamin." Megalin is essential for renal proximal tubule reabsoption and accumulation of transcobalamin-[B.sub.12]. The American Journal of Physiology. March 2002. "Elevated metabolites of the enzyme cofactor cobalamin in elderly patients may predict the future development of cognitive dysfunction, especially in men, according to a study presented at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society. High levels of methylcitric acid and, to a lesser degree, other cobalamin (vitamin [B.sub.12] metabolites correlated significantly with lower scores on many sections of the California Verbal Learning Test (CVLT), reported Dr. Angela Garcia of Queen's University, Kingston, Ont." Cobalamin markers could signal cognitive decline. (Nondemented Elderly Patients). Family Practice News. Oct. 2002. Methylcobalamin is the form of B12 that our bodies make and need and use. Learn about Methylcobalamin. B12/Methylcobalamin is safe because what our bodies don't use, they excrete: You don't have to worry that Methylcobalamin will hurt you. If you need B12 and take Methylcobalamin, your health will significantly improve within two months. Significantly. No doubt. I know from experience. (This is like Stravinsky who said, "Inspiration is never wrong. If it turns out to be wrong, it wasn't an inspiration.) (And, though true, I put that quote here to amuse you.) Methylcobalamin lozenges work even if you have B12 malabsorption illness, which is increasingly common, especially in people who have lots of stress, take antacids or some other medications... see the list of conditions contributing to malabsorption. I bet my fingernails showed signs of a deficiency at age 34!!! Research linking low B12, high homocysteine, and heart disease Check this page out! The bibliography for the above study contains 98 references. Order Methylcobalamin Now and begin taking it Excellent natural health reference books Love quotes, roses to grow and diamonds Stressed? Need to Relax? This is How I've been Losing Weight Neat things Is there someone you want to send flowers to? Nuts and Bolts of the office Good quotes and shopping Want to see my garden? Europe and Japan use a much higher "low" for B12 than we do in the United States. They found that mental impairment begins at levels of 550. Check it out. The U.S. low is 350 points below that, so Americans have to suffer more health loss before a blood test will alert their doctors to the problem. Last edited by skyspirit; 04-03-2007 at 05:11 AM. |
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