Abstract

The effect of chronic alcoholism on biochemical evaluation of thiamine status was studied by the concomitant determination of erythrocyte transketolase (ETK) activity, its relative increase by in vitro addition of thiamine diphosphate (TDP effect) and the direct measurement of thiamine and its phosphate esters by high performance liquid chromatography. Thirty-eight percent of alcoholic subjects showed a thiamine deficiency with decreased thiamine diphosphate concentrations compared with healthy subjects (90.8 ± 25.7 nmol/l vs. 176 ± 28.0 nmol/l, respectively, mean ± S.D., P < 0.001). Thiamine diphosphate concentrations were highly correlated with total thiamine concentrations and TDP effect (respectively r = 0.99 and 0.79, n = 85, P < 0.001). No abnormality in thiamine phosphorylation related to chronic alcoholism was noted. Finally, 47% of these deficient alcoholic patients had normal ETK activity. We concluded that, if indirect evaluation of thiamine status is to be chosen, the determination of ETK activity should be associated with TDP effect since the latter has been shown to be highly linked to total thiamine and thiamine diphosphate in erythrocytes. Furthermore, the direct measurement of thiamine and its phosphate esters was a more sensitive and specific index of thiamine nutrition.

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