Vitamin B12: An Intergenerational Story.

Q1 Medicine
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-01-28 DOI:10.1159/000503358
Yajnik Chittaranjan
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Vitamin B12 is a fascinating nutrient in that it is made by microbes but is essential for human metabolism. Humans can get it only from animal origin foods. Dietary deficiency rather than an absorption defect (Pernicious anemia, intrinsic factor defect) is the commonest cause of deficiency in the world, contributed by cultural and economic imperatives. Indians have a large prevalence of subclinical B12 deficiency due to vegetarianism. Birth cohort with long-term serial follow-up (Pune Maternal Nutrition Study) has helped reveal the life-course evolution of B12 deficiency: genetics, transplacental and lactational transfer from the mother, influence of family environment, rapid childhood and adolescent growth, and low consumption of milk all made a contribution. A novel association of low maternal B12 status was with fetal growth restriction and increased risk factors of diabetes in the baby. After demonstrating adequate absorption of small (2 μg) dose of vitamin B12, and a noticeable improvement of metabolic parameters in a pilot trial, we planned a supplementation trial in adolescents to improve outcomes in their babies (a primordial prevention called Pune Rural Intervention in the Young Adolescent). The results are awaited. The long-term effects in the babies born in the trial will contribute to a better understanding of the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease.

维生素B12:一个代际故事。
维生素B12是一种令人着迷的营养物质,它是由微生物产生的,但对人体新陈代谢至关重要。人类只能从动物源性食物中获得。饮食缺乏而不是吸收缺陷(恶性贫血,内在因素缺陷)是世界上最常见的缺乏原因,这是由文化和经济需求造成的。由于素食主义,印度人普遍存在亚临床B12缺乏症。长期连续随访的出生队列(普纳孕产妇营养研究)帮助揭示了B12缺乏症的生命历程演变:遗传、母亲经胎盘和哺乳期转移、家庭环境的影响、儿童和青少年快速生长、低牛奶消耗都有贡献。母亲B12水平低与胎儿生长受限和婴儿糖尿病风险因素增加有关。在一项试点试验中,我们证明了小剂量(2 μg)维生素B12的充分吸收,以及代谢参数的显著改善,我们计划在青少年中进行补充试验,以改善其婴儿的结局(一项名为浦那青少年农村干预的原始预防措施)。结果还在等待中。在试验中出生的婴儿的长期影响将有助于更好地理解健康和疾病的发育起源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series
Nestle Nutrition Institute workshop series Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
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