scholarly journals The urinary excretion of assayable vitamin B12 and radioactivity after parenteral 58Co B12 in man

1961 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 351-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Adams
2010 ◽  
pp. 431-442
Author(s):  
T Navrátil ◽  
E Kohlíková ◽  
M Petr ◽  
D Pelclová ◽  
M Heyrovský ◽  
...  

The administration of creatine (5 g/day for one month) to 11 young active sportsmen affected their urinary excretion of creatine, creatinine, and thiodiglycolic acid (TDGA) as well as blood levels of homocysteine, vitamin B12 and folates. The probands were divided into four groups, according to the amount of creatine found in urine, and of folates and vitamin B12 determined in blood. The changes of folates and vitamin B12 were mutually reciprocal. Each group utilized CR as donor of one- and two-carbon (1C and 2C) units by means of homocysteine (HoCySH), folates, and vitamin B12, in different metabolic pathways. In 10 men the creatine administration was accompanied by an increase of HoCySH level in blood, while in the last man, with accidentally discovered hyperhomocysteinemia, the HoCySH level dropped by 50 %. Differences between initial and terminal TDGA levels indicate that creatine affects equilibria of redox processes. Creatinine excretion into urine changed in the dependence on the extent of metabolic disturbances.


Blood ◽  
1961 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 511-521 ◽  
Author(s):  
GEORGE B. JERZY GLASS ◽  
HELEN R. SKEGGS ◽  
DUK HO LEE ◽  
E. LINN JONES ◽  
WILLIAM W. HARDY

Abstract A single intramuscular injection of 500 or 1000 µg. of hydroxocobalamin to 17 individuals resulted in a 1.8- to 4.1-times higher mean serum vitamin B12 blood level, respectively, 5 hours after injection; a 4.6- and 12.8-times higher level 24 hours after injection; a 2.4- and 5.2-times higher level 72 hours after injection, and a 1.6- and 2.4-times higher level by the 2nd through the 4th week after injection than identical doses of cyanocobalamin administered to 19 individuals. The vitamin B12 blood levels following i.m. administration of 500 or 1000 µg. of hydroxocobalamin were significantly higher during the first 24 and 48 hours, respectively, than they were after a cyanocobalamin zinc-tannate complex given to 17 individuals at identical doses. After a single i.m. injection of 500 or 1000 µg. of hydroxocobalamin, an average of only 16 per cent and 27 per cent, respectively, of the vitamin B12 was lost in the 72-hour urines, as compared to 60 per cent and 69 per cent, respectively, after identical doses of cyanocobalamin. These differences, again, were highly significant statistically. The results of these studies give evidence of a slower rate of urinary excretion of hydroxocobalamin as compared to that of cyanocobalamin, and of its ability to build up consistently higher and more prolonged vitamin B12 levels in the blood.


1965 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 75-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Horacio M. Canelas ◽  
Nelson de Carvalho ◽  
Arnaldo Gama da Rocha

Foi estudada a absorção de vitamina B12 em 9 casos de mielose funicular antes e após a administração de ACTH por via intravenosa em um esquema terapêutico com duração variável entre 19 e 43 dias. Em 7 casos foi verificado aumento da absorção. A diferença média de modificação no teste de excreção urinaria de vitamina B12 radioativa situou-se próximo do nível de significancia estatística. Este resultado reforça a indicação do emprego de corticotropina na mielose funicular, pois o hormônio irá atuar tanto sobre o componente alérgico do prccesso desmielinizante, quanto sobre a carência de vitamina B12 resultante do déficit de absorção. Embora o material aqui analisado seja muito pequeno para garantir uma conclusão definitiva, nossos resultados demonstram que, provavelmente, o ACTH age sobre a absorção da vitamina B12 através da mucosa intestinal, e não mediante o aumento de secreção do fator intrínseco ou a mobilização dos depósitos dessa vitamina. In order to study a possible mobilizing effect of ACTH on the radioactive vitamin B12 stores, the intervals between the last urinary excretion test and the test after completion of treatment were analyzed (Table 1). It is easily noticed that in the 7 cases with increase of vitamin B12 absorption these periods were the most varied, lasting from 9 to 62 days. And also in the 2 cases with decrease of absorption the intervals were very dissimilar, namely 15 and 56 days. So, it seems that this effect of ACTH did not play a significant role in the results. Likewise, the time elapsed between the completion of treatment and the repetition of the Schilling's test had no apparent relationship with the results.


1970 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 681-688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hedley R. Marston ◽  
Shirley H. Allen

1. Formiminoglutamic acid, a product of the catabolism of histidine, is excreted in abnormally large amounts in the urines of vitamin B12-deficient rats and of vitamin B12-deficient sheep; the excretion is reduced to negligible amounts after administration of vitamin B12. 2. After administration of certain methyl donors to vitamin B12-deficient rats or sheep urinary excretion of formiminoglutamic acid is temporarily decreased. 3. Irrespective of the pteroylglutamic acid status of the animals neither vitamin B12-deficient rats nor vitamin B12-deficient sheep have the ability to deal efficiently with histidine. 4. In sheep, urinary excretion of formiminoglutamic acid is increased after administration of aminopterin; treatment with pteroylglutamic acid restores the ability of the animal to deal with the catabolic products of histidine. 5. The possible functions of vitamin B12 and methionine in relieving a virtual deficiency of pteroylglutamic acid are discussed.


Blood ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 457-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C. JOHNSON ◽  
E. S. BERGER

Abstract 1. Patients without known hematologic disease were given 8 µg. (0.2 µc. Co60 vitamin B12 as a water solution or in various types of delayed release capsules. 2. All groups showed approximately equal fecal excretion. However, the cobalt60-labeled vitamin B12 delayed release capsules showed a greater urinary excretion after a loading dose of stable B12 than did the water solution of labeled vitamin B12.


Blood ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 339-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRITZ LOEWENSTEIN

Abstract Vitamin B12 absorption has been studied in patients with subtotal gastrectomy by means of the Co60 B12 urinary excretion test. Five patients tested before and after a conventional subtotal gastrectomy showed no significant change in absorption. Of 22 patients who were tested at various intervals after a conventional (distal) subtotal gastrectomy, 19 had normal vitiamin B12 absorption and three had low absorption that was corrected to normal by giving gastric juice with the test dose. Three patients who had had a proximal gastrectomy showed normal vitamin B12 absorption, indicating that intrinsic factor was being produced by the remaining distal portion of the stomach.


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