scholarly journals Vitamin B12 and Folic Acid Metabolism in Hookworm-Infected Patients

Blood ◽  
1959 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 1269-1279 ◽  
Author(s):  
MIGUEL LAYRISSE ◽  
NORMA BLUMENFELD ◽  
IRIS DUGARTE ◽  
MARCEL ROCHE

Abstract Studies on the metabolism of B12 and folic acid were performed in patients with heavy hookworm infection and severe iron deficiency anemia, and in patients with light infection, noninfected patients and normal subjects. Patients with heavy hookworm infection showed a marked decrease of the serum B12 as compared with normal subjects. Eight of 21 cases studied showed values of serum B12 below 100 µµg./ml. Twelve of 13 patients with severe hookworm infection showed impairment of the pteroylglutamic acid intestinal absorption; however, none of them exhibited megaloblastic proliferation in the bone marrow. They all recovered with iron therapy alone. The patients with light infection and the noninfected patients with iron deficiency anemia did not demonstrate significant differences from the normal subjects studied.

Blood ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
MIGUEL LAYRISSE ◽  
JESÚS LINARES ◽  
MARCEL ROCHE ◽  
Adelina Ojeda ◽  
Alvaro Carstens ◽  
...  

Abstract An excess hemolysis was found in subjects with iron deficiency anemia associated with hookworm infection. Red cell survival, measured with Cr51 and DFP32 in the subjects before deworming, showed a marked disproportion between the decrease of the survival and the amount of daily intestinal blood loss in most cases. Excess of hemolysis was still present after more than 90 per cent of the parasites were removed. Red cell survival became normal after correction of anemia through iron treatment. Excess of hemolysis was also present in noninfected subjects with iron deficiency anemia due to other causes. The reduction in the survival of the erythrocytes from infected subjects transfused into normal recipients shows that the hemolytic process is due to an intrinsic defect of the red cells. The low values of hemoglobinemia and the presence of haptoglobins in the plasma indicate that hemoglobin has not been liberated in excess intravascularly. Finally, the fact that the red cells from an infected patient taken after deworming survived normally in splenectomized recipients indicates that the spleen is probably the principal site of the red cell destruction. The clinical and autopsy findings suggest that splenic function is not pathologically increased, but rather that this organ is acting physiologically at a more rapid rate, "culling" the abnormal circulating red cells and thus leading to a decrease in red cell survival. The studies presented here also indicate that the hookworm infection per se does not induce hemolysis.


2007 ◽  
Vol 232 (8) ◽  
pp. 1014-1020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jerome l. Sullivan

Hepcidin has emerged as the key hormone in the regulation of iron balance and recycling. Elevated levels increase iron in macrophages and inhibit gastrointestinal iron uptake. The physiology of hepcidin suggests an additional mechanism by which iron depletion could protect against atherosclerotic lesion progression. Without hepcidin, macrophages retain less iron. Very low hepcidin levels occur in iron deficiency anemia and also in homozygous hemochromatosis. There is defective retention of iron in macrophages in hemochromatosis and also evidently no increase in atherosclerosis in this disorder. In normal subjects with intact hepcidin responses, atherosclerotic plaque has been reported to have roughly an order of magnitude higher iron concentration than that in healthy arterial wall. Hepcidin may promote plaque destabilization by preventing iron mobilization from macrophages within atherosclerotic lesions; the absence of this mobilization may result in increased cellular iron loads, lipid peroxidation, and progression to foam cells. Marked downregulation of hepcidin (e.g., by induction of iron deficiency anemia) could accelerate iron loss from intralesional macrophages. It is proposed that the minimally proatherogenic level of hepcidin is near the low levels associated with iron deficiency anemia or homozygous hemochromatosis. Induced iron deficiency anemia intensely mobilizes macrophage iron throughout the body to support erythropoiesis. Macrophage iron in the interior of atherosclerotic plaques is not exempt from this process. Decreases in both intralesional iron and lesion size by systemic iron reduction have been shown in animal studies. It remains to be confirmed in humans that a period of systemic iron depletion can decrease lesion size and increase lesion stability as demonstrated in animal studies. The proposed effects of hepcidin and iron in plaque progression offer an explanation of the paradox of no increase in atherosclerosis in patients with hemochromatosis despite a key role of iron in atherogenesis in normal subjects.


Anemia ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Penpe Gul Firat ◽  
Ersan Ersin Demirel ◽  
Seyhan Dikci ◽  
Irfan Kuku ◽  
Oguzhan Genc

Purpose. Iron deficiency anemia is an important public health problem. Also it is considered to be a risk factor for many diseases. The study demonstrates the iron deficiency anemia frequency in glaucoma patients and compares with the normal subjects. We aimed to determine the iron deficiency anemia frequency in glaucoma patients.Methods. Prospective, controlled study in a single university hospital setting. A total of 130 normal subjects (Group 1) and 131 glaucoma patients (Group 2) were included. The erythrocytes parameters, hemoglobin, red blood cell, hematocrit, mean corpuscular volume, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, and red blood cell distribution width, and iron status indicators, Fe (iron), total iron binding capacity, and ferritin of the cases, in normal subjects and glaucoma patients were compared.Results. There was no statistically significant difference for the erythrocyte parameters between the groups (p≥0.05). The number of the patients with iron deficiency anemia in both groups was similar. No statistically significant difference was found in the comparison of erythrocyte parameters and iron status indicators values according to the number of antiglaucomatous agents and visual field changes according to the presence of anemia in Group 2 (p≥0.05). A statistically significant difference was found only in MCH when the erythrocyte parameters and iron status indicators values of the cases in glaucoma patients were compared with the glaucoma duration (p<0.05).Conclusion. The iron deficiency anemia frequency was like the normal population in glaucoma patients.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rhodner J. Orisma ◽  

Obviously iron deficiency is determined as the most prevalent nutritional problem in the world today. It is provoked by a lack of iron in the diet. In South Florida, since pregnant women tend to neglect prenatal care, the prevalence of anemia primarily occurs during the first and second trimesters of their pregnancy. Accordingly, medical studies show that premature deliveries, low birth weight, birth defects, infant mortality, etc. result from iron deficiency anemia. In this, birth defects are, however, considered as quite associated with folic acid deficiency anemia. That explains why, this paper also deals with the study published by the March of Dimes on folic acid and pregnancy. In addition, the paper approaches qualitatively the socioeconomic and sociocultural aspects of the disease according to eight (8) interviews conducted in Broward and Miami Date counties to highlight the existing preventive programs for vulnerable population such as women, infants and children in South Florida, USA.


2021 ◽  
Vol Volume 17 ◽  
pp. 1075-1081
Author(s):  
Yasinta Rakanita ◽  
Mas Rizky AA Syamsunarno ◽  
Rano K Sinuraya ◽  
Eka W Suradji ◽  
Rizky Abdulah ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 3719-3719
Author(s):  
Zhisheng Jiang ◽  
Chunna He ◽  
Hong Zhou ◽  
Qing Wang ◽  
Da Li ◽  
...  

Abstract 100 cases of aged non-hematological anemia patients hospitalized in our hospital since July 1, 2000, were analyzed for study on anemia etiology. The mean age was 72.08+/−10.86 (60–90) years (60~ 42; 70~ 39; 80~ 18; 90~ 3) at hospitalization. The etiology of anemia with known showed as followed: Malignant tumor 34: included digestive system malignant tumor 27 (gastric cancer 7, rectal carcinoma 7, colon cancer 6, liver cancer 3, cholangiocarcinoma 2, pencreatic duct cancer 2), lung cancer 3, urinary tract cancer 2, bone sarcoma 2. Iron deficiency anemia 47: digestive tract ulcer 16, hemorrhoid 14. The total number of iron deficiency anemia includes digestive tumors with bleeding. Single nutrition deficiency anemia, macrocytic anemia, i.e. vitamin B12 and/or folic acid deficiency (non-malignant, Non-iron deficiency anemia) 8. Inherited Anemia 10: Thalassemia 6, Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency 4. Chronic diseases 23: Bone fracture 19, Stroke 18, infection 12, Diabetes 10, Kidney function failure 8, Gynecological bleeding 4. The etiology of anemia is unknown 29: it included some chronic diseases with anemia. Discussion: Incidence of malignant tumor is very high. The incidence of malignancy was 34% in the series of aged anemia. The chance of gene mutation increased as patients’ age getting older. When to diagnose aged anemia, we should better to consider that the primary disease is tumor maybe, and look for tumor carefully. Mechanism of anemia in patients with tumor Gastrointestinal tumor with chronic bleeding that can result in anemia. But, there is serious anemia without bleeding in our series. There were some different chronic diseases in 34 cases of tumor. Researchers have discovered that structural and metabolic disorders were detected in mature erythrocytes in patients with and without anemia in stomach cancer. Anemia development pathways were dependent on enhanced hemolysis of circulating erythrocytes and influx of immature cells from the bone marrow. Complication of etiology in aged anemia Etiological diseases of aged anemia is different and complicate. The major of aged anemia has two or more primary diseases. The primary presenting of gastrointestinal tumor maybe is iron deficiency anemia. The tumor with anemia can result from nutritional deficiency at advance. For example, there were vitamin B12 or/and folic acid 8 cases in our aged series. Some anemia patients in our series complicated cardiac disease, stroke, and bone fracture. 2 cases of G6PD deficiency had primarily diagnosed when they suffered from infection at very old age, 70 years or more in these aged anemia. There are 100 million G6PD in whole world, the incidence is very high especially in Africa and South China. Diagnosis should make as soon as possible. Many advanced tumors were incurable. About 20 per cent of patients with carcinoma of the colon or rectum present with metastatic disease. Surgeons are frequently asked to consider resection or other operative procedures in these patients for palliation. But, average survival was 11.2 months for operative patients versus 6.5 months for nonoperative patients (P < 0.05). So we should better discover tumor anemia and differentiate from other benign anemia in the aged anemia as soon as possible for curable section. To pay attention to treat of etiological diseases is very important for aged anemia patients.


1984 ◽  
Vol 48 (3) ◽  
pp. 131-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. H. Bodemann ◽  
A. Rieger ◽  
K. J. Bross ◽  
H. Schr�ter-Urban ◽  
G. W. L�hr

Author(s):  
Monika Singh ◽  
O. P. Rajoura ◽  
H. A. Raghavemdra

Background: Iron deficiency anemia is a public health alarm in developing countries. Anemia is an indicator of both poor health and poor nutrition. It has been observed that iron deficiency anemia in children and adolescent leads to growth delay. Weekly iron folic acid (WIFS) with health education can significantly reduce prevalence of nutritional anemia and improve growth among adolescents is seen elsewhere in the World. To confirm these results in India, a study was conducted in Delhi to investigate the effect of WIFS and Health education on growth in adolescent school girls.Methods: A school based intervention study was conducted in selected government schools of Delhi. Total of 210 adolescent school girls (11th standard) were included in the study, 106 in intervention group and 104 in control group. The intervention group was given weekly iron folic acid supplementation (WIFS) with health education once a month, while a control group was given only WIFS.Results: A significant weight gain of 2.8 kg was seen in the intervention group, whereas girls in the control group showed 1.8 kg weight gain. The growth increment was greater in the intervention group than control group which was found to be statistically significant (p<0.01).Conclusions: WIFS and health education is recommended for growth promotion among adolescent girls especially who are underweight. Additional programmatic research should be carried out for understanding of the WIFS with health education -growth relationships in adolescence.


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