Literature DB >> 4717845

Vitamin B 12 status in pregnancy among immigrants to Britain.

P D Roberts, H James, A Petrie, J O Morgan, A V Hoffbrand.   

Abstract

Haemoglobin, serum vitamin B(12), and serum and red cell folate levels have been measured in 322 pregnant immigrant women in London at their first booking and in a proportion at 34 weeks of gestation and postnatally. The Indian, East-African Indian, and Pakistani and Bangladeshi patients showed significantly lower initial mean serum vitamin B(12) levels than the European group, the levels being lower in Hindu and Sikh patients than in Moslems. The patients of West Indian, Indian, and East-African Indian origin showed significantly lower initial mean haemoglobin levels than the immigrants from European countries. Though there was no overall correlation between haemoglobin and serum vitamin B(12) level the incidence of hypersegmented polymorphs and macrocytosis in the peripheral blood was highest in the Indian and East-African Indian patients, and both these features were particularly frequent in patients with subnormal serum vitamin B(12) levels. Only one patient, however, had overt megaloblastic anaemia due to vitamin B(12) deficiency. The Indian patients whose red cell folate levels were less than 200 ng/ml also had a lower mean serum vitamin B(12) level than those with red cell folate levels greater than 200 ng/ml. The Indian patients had smaller babies than the Europeans but this was not related to the differences in vitamin B(12) status between the two groups. However, out of 39 babies of the Indian group 5 (13%) showed subnormal serum vitamin B(12) levels in the first 10 days of life, the lowest level being 120 pg/ml.Though there was an overall statistically significant fall in serum vitamin B(12) between first booking and 34 weeks of pregnancy there was no significant fall in serum vitamin B(12) in those who initially had subnormal levels. Thus many Indian women are vitamin B(12) deficient in pregnancy, and this is associated with morphological blood abnormalities in many cases, but megaloblastic anaemia due to this deficiency is relatively infrequent.

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Year:  1973        PMID: 4717845      PMCID: PMC1586516          DOI: 10.1136/bmj.3.5871.67

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br Med J        ISSN: 0007-1447


  15 in total

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Authors:  P M Newberne; V R Young
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1973-03-23       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Nutritional state of elderly Asian and English subjects in Coventry.

Authors:  P C Elwood; M L Burr; D Hole; A Harrison; T K Morris; C I Wilson; R W Richardson; N K Shinton
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1972-06-03       Impact factor: 79.321

3.  Response of dietary vitamin-B12 deficiency to physiological oral doses of cyanocobalamin.

Authors:  J S Stewart; P D Roberts; A V Hoffbrand
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4.  Anaemia and folate status in late pregnancy in a mixed Asiatic population.

Authors:  B M Hibbard; E D Hibbard
Journal:  J Obstet Gynaecol Br Commonw       Date:  1972-07

5.  Megaloblastic anaemia among Indians in Britain.

Authors:  R P Britt; C Harper; G H Spray
Journal:  Q J Med       Date:  1971-10

6.  Serum vitamin B12 and vitamin B 12 binding capacity of Southern Nigerian blood donors.

Authors:  A F Fleming
Journal:  West Afr Med J Niger Pract       Date:  1968-02

7.  The use of a simple whole-body counter for haematological investigations.

Authors:  S T Callender; L J Witts; G T Warner; R Oliver
Journal:  Br J Haematol       Date:  1966-05       Impact factor: 6.998

8.  Megaloblastic anemia of infancy secondary to maternal pernicious anemia.

Authors:  B C Lampkin; N A Shore; D Chadwick
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1966-05-26       Impact factor: 91.245

9.  The excretion of methylmalonic acid and succinic acid in vitamin B 12 and folate deficiency.

Authors:  M Brozović; A V Hoffbrand; A Dimitriadou; D L Mollin
Journal:  Br J Haematol       Date:  1967-11       Impact factor: 6.998

10.  Method of assay of red cell folate activity and the value of the assay as a test for folate deficiency.

Authors:  A V Hoffbrand; F A Newcombe; D L Mollin
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1966-01       Impact factor: 3.411

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  5 in total

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Authors:  J A Mountifield
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5.  Maternal homocysteine in pregnancy and offspring birthweight: epidemiological associations and Mendelian randomization analysis.

Authors:  Chittaranjan S Yajnik; Giriraj R Chandak; Charudatta Joglekar; Prachi Katre; Dattatray S Bhat; Suraj N Singh; Charles S Janipalli; Helga Refsum; Ghattu Krishnaveni; Sargoor Veena; Clive Osmond; Caroline H D Fall
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  5 in total

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