Abstract
Determination of methylmalonic acid (MMA) in serum or urine for evaluation of tissue cobalamin (vitamin B12) deficiency is becoming an important diagnostic procedure. Here I present the first investigation of dietary influence on concentrations of MMA in serum and urine. Everyday meals caused an increase in urinary excretion, whereas the concentration in serum was not increased significantly. It is difficult to prime the accumulation of MMA in normal subjects by stressing the metabolic pathway; after loading subjects with 100 mmol of isoleucine or valine, the absolute amount of MMA excreted increased by only about 3 mumol. Its concentration in serum tended to decrease and its urinary excretion declined after lack of protein intake for more than 15 h. Although a linear relationship was demonstrated, for the first time, between concentrations in serum and urinary excretion, my results indicate that patients with early evidence of cobalamin deficiency and normal subjects may best be differentiated by measurements in serum, especially in the case of nonfasting (i.e., ambulatory) patients.
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