Abstract

Vitamin B12 assimilation might be disrupted in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. We therefore measured B12 carrier protein saturation and inactive B12 ‘analogues’ in patients compared with healthy elderly individuals in a prospective case-controlled survey. Twenty-three patients, aged 60 or over, with features compatible with DSM-IV criteria for primary degenerative dementia of the Alzheimer type were recruited together with 18 cognitively intact age-matched control subjects. Total vitamin B12 (active corrinoids), holo- and apo-haptocorrin and transcobalamin were measured in serum. B12 analogues (inactive corrinoids) were estimated from the difference between R-binder-determined corrinoids and an intrinsic factor based B12 assay. Alzheimer patients had significantly lower active corrinoid than control subjects and the analogue/corrinoid ratio was significantly higher in the Alzheimer group. The inter-relationship between age, analogues and transcobalamin polarised patients into two distinct groups. Two disparate mechanisms might exist for the development of cerebral B12 deficiency in Alzheimer’s disease, although both imply a disruption of selective B12 assimilation and analogue elimination in such patients.

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