scholarly journals Pernicious Anemia without Gastric Atrophy and in the Presence of Free Hydrochloric Acid

Blood ◽  
1957 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 461-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. N. HARRIS-JONES ◽  
H. T. SWAN ◽  
G. R. TUDHOPE

Abstract A case is described of Addisonian pernicious anemia in a girl aged 16 years, associated with a normal gastric mucosa and free hydrochloric acid in the stomach. Partial, but significant deficiency of intrinsic factor activity was demonstrated in her gastric juice by the use of Co56-labeled vitamin B12.

Blood ◽  
1961 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 618-631 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID H. CLEMENT ◽  
CHARLES A. NICHOL ◽  
ARNOLD D. WELCH

Abstract Observations on a 4-year-old boy with Addisonian pernicious anemia have been presented. Noteworthy clinical features included the onset of glossitis at the age of 4 months, followed by anemia severe enough to require hospitalization at the age of 1 year. Relapse occurred in the absence of specific therapy with vitamin B12 and was completely unaffected by the administration of folic acid. Studies with radioactive vitamin B12 demonstrated that almost all of the compound administered by mouth was unabsorbed and was recovered in the stools. When the vitamin was given simultaneously with a concentrate of intrinsic factor, however, approximately 70 per cent was absorbed. Furthermore, the child’s gastric juice, when mixed with radioactive vitamin B12 and fed to an adult with pernicious anemia in relapse, failed to enhance the latter’s absorption of the vitamin. The failure of our patient to absorb the vitamin alone, but his ability to do so when it was administered with intrinsic factor concentrate, was also confirmed by the "Schilling test," in which a proportion of the absorbed radioactive vitamin was "flushed" into the urine by parenteral injection of one milligram of conventional vitamin B12. Of special interest was the occurrence in the urine of an unidentified derivative of tetrahydrofolic acid, derived from orally administered pteroylglutamic acid. The presence of this compound in the urine was demonstrated chromatographically when the patient was critically ill with his disease prior to treatment with vitamin B12. Subsequent to therapy with vitamin B12, while the administration of folic acid was continued, the abnormal metabolite of folic acid could not be found in the urine. Similarly, the administration of folic acid did not lead to the appearance of this metabolite in the urine at a time when, after more than two years without specific therapy, a hematological relapse occurred that was much less severe than that previously observed. The implications of these observations, with respect to the metabolic interrelationships of folic acid and vitamin B12, are discussed. Of further interest were the findings of strongly acid gastric juice containing much mucus and free hydrochloric acid. A fairly normal gastric mucosa was demonstrated by biopsy. The meaning of these unusual findings is discussed and an hypothesis to account for them is offered. The probable sequence of events in these patients from childhood to the development of anemia, usually in later life, is set forth.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1951 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-106
Author(s):  
EDWARD H. REISNER ◽  
JAMES A. WOLFF ◽  
R. JAMES MCKAY ◽  
EUGENIA F. DOYLE

Histories have been presented of two pairs of sibling children with recurrent macrocytic anemia with megaloblastic bone marrow responding specifically to liver extract and vitamin B12. The clinical features and laboratory findings were similar to those of adult pernicious anemia in every respect except for the inconstant presence of histamine refractory achlorhydria. All the patients responded to vitamin B12 given parenterally, but in three to whom it was given by mouth no response was obtained. Two of these subsequently responded to oral B12 when it was accompanied by normal gastric juice. The other two developed histamine refractory achlorhydria while in hematologic remission. This is interpreted as proof that the anemia was due to deficient intrinsic factor in the gastric juice. Three patients showed evidence of disease of the spinal cord, in two of whom the symptoms were severe. These symptoms were compatible with a diagnosis of dorsolateral sclerosis, and improved with antipernicious anemia therapy. In one of these patients, treated with folic acid, the neurologic lesions were aggravated severely. Pernicious anemia due to the absence of gastric juice intrinsic factor occurs in children. The presence of free hydrochloric acid in the gastric contents does not preclude the possibility of the disease.


Blood ◽  
1953 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 469-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
RONALD H. GIRDWOOD

Abstract 1. When the sera of pernicious anemia patients or controls were heated at 100 C. for 30 minutes, they developed the ability to support the growth of L. leichmannii by virtue of some substance other than vitamin B12. It seemed likely, however, that following the administration of the vitamin, such heating also liberated free B12 in the serum from a combined form. 2. The L. leichmannii assay did not appear to be satisfactory for showing possible difference in the levels of vitamin B12 in the urines or sera of pernicious anemia patients and controls. 3. Parenterally administered vitamin B12 did not cause any measurable rise in the serum level of folic acid or citrovorum factor in pernicious anemia patients or controls. 4. The synthetic folic acid conjugates pteroyldiglutamic acid and pteroyltriglutamic acid appeared in the sera and urines of pernicious anemia patients as pteroylglutamic acid or some related substance with folic acid activity for S. faecalis. 5. Orally administered citrovorum factor appeared to be largely converted by the gastric juice to folic acid if free hydrochloric acid was present. When administered parenterally, however, citrovorum factor was excreted in the urine largely unchanged.


Blood ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 4 (12) ◽  
pp. 1361-1366 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. WENDELL DAVIS ◽  
RICHARD M. CHRISTIAN ◽  
DONALD M. ERVIN ◽  
LAWRENCE E. YOUNG

Abstract A case of megaloblastic anemia without specific neurologic complications in a 6 year old girl is presented as an example of pernicious anemia in childhood despite the fact that a small amount of free hydrochloric acid was present in the gastric juice after injection of histamine. Prompt hematologic response was obtained following administration of refined liver extract, folic acid and vitamin B12 in successive relapses.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 149-156
Author(s):  
Brian McNicholl ◽  
Bridget Egan

Three Irish children, two of them siblings, developed megaloblastic anemia around one year; deficiency of intrinsic factor (I.F.), presumably congenital, was shown by Schilling tests and assay of gastric juice. Congenital pernicious anemia (P.A.), in contrast to adult P.A., shows normal gastric mucosa and acidity and no antibodies to gastric mucosa or I.F. Adult type P.A., with gastric atrophy and achlorhydria, if occurring in childhood, can be called "juvenile P.A.," "congenital P.A." being reserved for the type described here. P.A. associated with polyendocrinopathy and the type described by Imerslund due to specific B12 malabsorption should be named accordingly. Congenital P.A.'s inheritance is thought to be autosomal recessive. Growth retardation and acceleration appeared to be related to B12 deficiency and treatment. I.Q.'s of around 70 in each child may represent the effects of B12 deficiency on cerebral growth. An initial malabsorption of B12 was shown to improve markedly with B12 treatment. In diagnosis of megaloblastic anemia, only that due to B12 deficiency will respond to dosage of 2 to 5 µg B12 (intramuscular) daily. Early diagnosis and treatment may prevent brain damage.


Blood ◽  
1953 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 491-501 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. H. PRUSOFF ◽  
A. D. WELCH ◽  
R. W. HEINLE ◽  
G. C. MEACHAM

Abstract Fractionation of desiccated defatted hog stomach through the use of isoelectric and ammonium sulfate precipitation technics, and guided by assays in patients with pernicious anemia in relapse given daily oral doses of 5 µg. of vitamin B12, has led to the concentration of intrinsic factor activity in an amount of protein equivalent to 0.03 per cent of the original weight of crude material. The electrophoretic pattern of this active fraction indicated a lack of homogeneity. The vitamin B12-binding activities of three fractions obtained by precipitation with ammonium sulfate were investigated by microbial inhibition and dialysis methods. There was no correlation between the ability of the fractions to bind vitamin B12 and to exert intrinsic factor activity. Among these fractions, that with the highest intrinsic factor activity in patients with pernicious anemia in relapse bound the least amount of vitamin B12.


Blood ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 501-516 ◽  
Author(s):  
FRANCOIS P. RETIEF ◽  
CHESTER W. GOTTLIEB ◽  
SHAUL KOCHWA ◽  
PETER W. PRATT ◽  
VICTOR HERBERT

Abstract A method of DEAE cellulose chromatography is described whereby the main vitamin B12 binders in serum, gastric juice and saliva may be separated into two distinct fractions, one containing alpha-globulin binder and the other containing beta-globulin binder, in less than 2 hours. Typical elution patterns of alpha-globulin and beta-globulin B12 binders from normal (⅘ beta; ⅕ alpha), pernicious anemia (⅔ beta; ⅓ alpha), and chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) (¾ alpha) sera are presented. Chromatography of normal gastric juice produced two peaks of B12-binding material, one containing all the intrinsic factor (IF) B12 binder (as well as some non-IF binder), and the other consisting almost exclusively of non-IF B12 binders. Pernicious anemia gastric juice also produced two peaks, but IF was absent. Saliva had one main peak of B12-binding material which seemed to correspond to the non-IF binder of normal gastric juices; both of these eluted with the alpha-globulin fraction.


Blood ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 582-588 ◽  
Author(s):  
LEON ELLENBOGEN ◽  
WILLIAM L. WILLIAMS

Abstract A technic for assaying consecutively up to 18 intrinsic factor preparations with one pernicious anemia patient is described. The use of repeated flushing doses appeared to have little effect on the respsonse in the urinary excretion test; nine patients were given up to 38 flushing doses of 1 mg. of nonradioactive B12 over a period of 44 days and showed essentially the same response to a standard intrinsic factor preparation at the beginning and end of this period. The excretion of vitamin B12 in the test increased with increasing amounts of intrinsic factor in each of four different preparations, indicating that large amounts of intrinsic factor did not inhibit absorption. There was no relationship between the urinary excretion values obtained with radioactive B12 alone and the values obtained with radioactive B12 plus standard intrinsic factor in a series of tests on 127 pernicious anemia patients. It appears that total rather than net excretion values are to be preferred in evaluating preparations. Since it has been shown that pernicious anemia patients given intrinsic factor absorb more than 0.5 µg. of radioactive vitamin B12, an oral dose of 2.0 µg. of B12 which allows an absorption of more than 0.5 µg. is preferred in order to extend the range of intrinsic factor test doses that can be assayed.


1930 ◽  
Vol 26 (9) ◽  
pp. 937-937
Author(s):  
N. Kramov

Abstracts. Internal illnesses. Treatment of pernicious anemia. Wilkinson (Brit. Med. Journ., No. 3605), proceeding from the theory that anemia perniciosa is the result of some defect in the gastric juice of the patient, unable to produce the necessary substances from food proteins, treated a. p .: 1) normal gastric juice, 2) raw and 3) dried pig stomach. A. came to a trace, conclusions: 1) normal gastric juice gives an improvement in the general condition and blood picture more pronounced than with hepatic therapy; 2) hydrochloric acid and pepsin did not give any effect in the hematological state of the patient; 3) the mucous membrane and the muscular layer of the pig's stomach, both are active in the treatment of a; R.; 4) the dried preparations of these both parts give the same results: 5) the results obtained from this gastric therapy are better than those from the hepatic therapy; 6) so. peptic enzyme, which contains the gastric mucosa and does not contain pepticenzyme, the muscular layer of the stomach, as well as the liver and kidneys, are a source of active hematopoietic substance.


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