| Literature DB >> 34046142 |
Brahim El Hasbaoui1, Nadia Mebrouk2, Salahiddine Saghir1, Abdelhkim El Yajouri1, Rachid Abilkassem1, Aomar Agadr1.
Abstract
Vitamin B12 deficiency in early childhood is an important cause of neurodevelopmental delay and regression. Most of these cases occur in exclusively breast-fed infants of deficient mothers. Symptoms and signs of vitamin B12 deficiency appear between the ages of 2 to 12 months and include vomiting, lethargy, failure to thrive, hypotonia, and arrest or regression of developmental skills. Approximately one half of this cases exhibit abnormal movements, variously described as tremors, twitches, chorea, or myoclonus. Urinary concentrations of methylmalonic acid and homocysteine are characteristically elevated in vitamin B12 deficiency. Hyperglycinuria is sometimes present. The early diagnosis and treatment of vitamin B12 deficiency is crucial for significant neurological impairment and long-term prognosis. Treatment with vitamin B12 corrects these metabolic abnormalities very rapidly (within a few days). Vitamin B12 supplementation of pregnant women may prevent neurological and neuroradiological findings of the infants. Because of the importance of vitamin B12 in the development of the foetal and neonatal brain, vegetarian and vegan mothers should be aware of the severe and not fully-reversible damages caused by insufficient nutritional intake of vitamin B12 during pregnancy and lactation. Therefore, efforts should be directed to prevent its deficiency in pregnant and breastfeeding women on vegan diets and their infants. It is also important to take the nutritional history of both infants and their mothers for the early prevention and treatment. Here an interesting case of vitamin B12 deficiency in a 10-month-old boy presented with psychomotor regression, hypotonia and lethargy. Copyright: Brahim El Hasbaoui et al.Entities:
Keywords: Vitamin B12 deficiency; breastfeeding; case report; pallor; psychomotor regression
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34046142 PMCID: PMC8140678 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2021.38.237.20967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1axial proton density-weighted images with delay in myelination in the periventricular white matter with cortical atrophy